Kabul, Sep 8 (ANI): At least two civilians were killed and six others were injured when a suicide car bomb exploded near Kabul’s military airport on Tuesday.
The windows of the city center were rattled due to the blast.
The car bomber rammed the main gate of the airport’s military base and exploded, reports BBC quoting the Afghanistans’s interior ministry sources as saying.
According to an eyewitness, the car bomb exploded near a NATO military convoy.
NATO-led alliance forces fighting the Taliban militia have an Air Force base at the Kabul airport, which is used for both civilian and military purposes.
The BBC also said that there were unconfirmed reports that members of Nato’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) were among the casualties.
“It was a suicide attack outside the main gate of the military base at the airport,” Nato officer Colonel Koziel Bart said.
The airport has been targeted in the past by suspected Taliban militants – in 2007, killing one civilian.
Tuesday’s attack follows a massive suicide car bomb last month on ISAF’s Kabul headquarters that killed seven Afghan civilians on the spot. (ANI)

Pakistan says US drone strikes ‘counter-productive’
Islamabad, Jan 28 (ANI): Pakistan on Wednesday hit back against US Defence Secretary Robert Gates statement by saying that US drone strikes inside its tribal areas were “counter-productive” to anti-terrorism efforts.
“Our policy remains unchanged and we believe drone strikes are counter-productive,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Sadiq said.
Speaking in response to a statement from Gates that the United States would “go after al-Qaeda wherever al-Qaeda is” and affirming that the new US Administration’s position had been transmitted to the Pakistani Government.
“Both President (George W.) Bush and President (Barack) Obama have made clear we will go after al Qaeda wherever al-Qaeda is, and we will continue to pursue that,” Gates told the Senate Armed Services Committee.
But the Pakistani foreign ministry spokesman branded the strikes by drones “counterproductive to our efforts to counter terrorism.”
He declined to make any further comment, The News reported.
Two missile strikes in South and North Waziristan, on Pakistan’s side of the border with Afghanistan, where US and NATO-led forces are battling Taliban insurgents, on Friday last week were the first such attacks since Obama took office. (ANI)