KABUL, Afghanistan -- A
suicide bomber rammed a car packed with explosives into a mini-bus
carrying foreign aviation workers to the airport in the Afghan capital
early Tuesday, killing at least nine people in an attack a militant
group said was revenge for an anti-Islam film that ridicules the Prophet
Muhammad.
The criminal director for
the Kabul police department, Mohammad Zahir, said eight men believed to
be foreign nationals working for an aviation company at the airport died
in the blast and 10 Afghan bystanders were wounded. The other person
killed was believed to be Afghan.
Haroon
Zarghoon, a spokesman for the Islamist militant group Hizb-i-Islami,
claimed responsibility for the dawn attack in an email to The Associated
Press. He said it was carried out by a 22-year-old woman named Fatima.
It was the first reported suicide car bombing ever to be carried out by a
woman in Afghanistan.
It came a day after
hundreds of Afghans burned cars and threw rocks at a U.S. military base
in the capital in a demonstration against the an anti-Islam film. One
police vehicle was burned by the mob before they finally dispersed
around midday Monday.
Kabul police chief Gen.
Mohammad Ayub Salangi said Tuesday's explosion took place near an avenue
northwest of the city center near Kabul International Airport. The
blast, which went off in front a gas station, was so powerful it hurled
the mini-bus at least 50 meters.
Interior
Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqi confirmed the death toll and said tests
were being carried out to determine if the suicide bomber was a woman.
An
eyewitness at the scene said he was waiting for a bus to go to work at
6:45 a.m. when he saw a small white sedan ram into the mini-bus.
"The
explosion was so powerful and loud that I could not hear anything for
10 minutes," said Abdullah Shah, a teacher waiting at a bus stop. "It
was early and there wasn't much traffic or there would have been many An
AP reporter at the scene of the blast aw at least six bodies next to
the destroyed mini-bus.
Hizb-i-Islami is led
by former warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. The group has recently sought to
participate in a so-far fruitless peace and reconciliation effort led by
President Hamid Karzai.
As part of the
group's effort, it offered a peace plan that called for a broad-based
government. Hizb-i-Islami is a radical Islamist militia that has
thousands of fighters and followers across the north and east of
Afghanistan. Its 65-year-old leader is a former Afghan prime minister
and one-time U.S. ally who is now listed as a terrorist by Washington.
The
Taliban have also threatened to increase their attacks against foreign
targets to avenge the controversial film. Taliban fighters last week
attacked a large British base in southern Afghanistan, killed two U.S.
Marines and destroyed six fighter jets. NATO forces killed 14 insurgents
and captured another who participated in the attack.