(Reuters) - A suicide attacker wearing a police uniform attacked a provincial police headquarters in southern Afghanistan on Saturday, killing one officer and wounding four other people, an official said. The bombing in Helmand
province is the latest by militants bent on weakening the Afghan
security forces ahead of the withdrawal of most foreign troops at the
end of this year. The
unidentified attacker approached the police compound in Lashkar Gah, the
provincial capital, wearing a police uniform but was stopped by a guard
at the entrance, said Farid Ahmad Obaidi, a spokesman for the Helmand
provincial police chief. The
bomber detonated his suicide vest, killing one nearby police officer
and wounding three other police and an army soldier, he said. Taliban
insurgents and their jihadist allies have been stepping up attacks in
Helmand. In 2009, a U.S. troop surge focused on wresting back control of
the strategic province. Most U.S. troops withdrew from Helmand earlier this year, and Afghan security forces have been fighting insurgents there. Since
the Taliban was ousted from power by the U.S.-led intervention after
the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in the U.S., it has been seeking to
re-establish its former hard-line Islamic state. Close to half of Afghanistan's opium, a major funding source for the insurgency, is produced in Helmand, according to the United Nations.
Suicide bomber attacks Afghan provincial police HQ, killing one
Reuters
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