THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING

6 security guards stabbed to death in Afghanistan bank heist

Insurgents fail to storm NATO base in south

Hospital staff moved the bodies of guards killed yesterday during a bank robbery in Mazar-e-Sharif, Afghanistan. Hospital staff moved the bodies of guards killed yesterday during a bank robbery in Mazar-e-Sharif, Afghanistan. (Mustafa Najafizada/Associated Press)
By Rahim Faiez
Associated Press / August 4, 2010

E-mail this article

Invalid E-mail address
Invalid E-mail address

Sending your article

Your article has been sent.

Text size +

KABUL, Afghanistan — Six Afghan private security guards were poisoned and fatally stabbed during a bank robbery in northern Afghanistan, police said yesterday.

Meanwhile, insurgents wearing suicide vests tried to storm NATO’s largest base in the south, but did not breach its defenses, officials said.

In the east, a NATO service member was killed yesterday during an insurgent attack. The coalition did not release details about the death or identify the nationality of the service member.

Alhaj Zaher Vahdat, deputy governor of Balkh Province, said one person has been arrested in the robbery Monday night at a branch of Kabul Bank in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif.

Sherjan Durani, a police spokesman for Balkh Province, said someone apparently mixed the poison into the guards’ food. The guards showed evidence of having vomited, he said.

The robbers used small and large knives to stab the guards in the neck, stomach, and heart, then fled with about $269,000 in US and Afghan currency. Earlier reports that the guards had been beheaded are inaccurate, Durani said.

Kabul Bank officials declined to comment until the matter has been investigated.

The assault on Kandahar Air Field started just before midday yesterday with two rockets fired into the base, then a handful of would-be suicide bombers assaulted the outer gates, said Commander Amanda Peterseim, a spokeswoman for NATO forces.

She said there had been no reports of NATO casualties, and that all the attackers were killed in the fighting. Peterseim said there were “approximately four’’ people in suicide vests.

“They either detonated themselves or were killed,’’ Peterseim said.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, saying they sent seven suicide bombers to assault the base. At least one of the bombers detonated his explosives at a base checkpoint, said Qari Yousef Ahmadi, a spokesman for the insurgent group.

Zalmai Ayubi, Kandahar provincial government spokesman, said two civilians who were outside the base were injured in the fighting.

Taliban insurgents previously tried to storm the Kandahar base on May 22, just a few days after the insurgents sent suicide bombers to assault the main US base in the country — Bagram Air Field near the capital.

In Kabul, a task force set up to tackle corruption announced the conviction yesterday of a regional police commander alleged to have taken thousands of dollars in bribes from drug runners across his five-province command.

Major General Malham Khan was convicted of abusing his authority after a one-day trial, according to a statement by the Criminal Justice Task Force. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison and fined $14,000.

Khan was found to have taken $7,000 in bribes in the past four months to allow drug traffickers to smuggle opium and other drugs into Turkmenistan and India, said Khalilu Rahman Motawakel, a spokesman for the task force.

Two of the police officers under his command testified against Khan in exchange for reduced prison terms of 2 1/2 years each, Motawakel said.

Khan had said he was innocent of all charges. His lawyer could not be reached immediately for comment.

The defense and the prosecution plan to appeal, Motawakel said. The prosecuting lawyers are hoping for a stiffer penalty, alleging that Khan had received tens of thousands of dollars in bribes, he said.

The Afghan government has pledged to clean up endemic corruption across its ministries and security forces after criticism from Western countries, particularly the United States, that are propping up the government with tens of thousands of troops to fight the Taliban.

Boston.com top stories on Twitter

    waiting for twitterWaiting for Twitter to feed in the latest...