Bacha Malkhui

has been wanted

by security officials

for a month.

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) – A car packed with explosives exploded in eastern Afghanistan, killing four people who apparently were planning a terrorist attack, an Afghan military official said Sunday.

Also Sunday a loud explosion rattled the Afghan capital of Kabul not far from the U.S. Embassy and the international peacekeepers’ compound where a rocket hit last week. No injuries were reported in either incident.

Police at the scene said Sunday’s explosion may have been caused by a rocket on the eastern edge of the city. The target was not immediately known, but it woke residents of the affluent Wazir Akbar Khan neighborhood, where many foreigners live.

The blast late Saturday in Karwan Sarui, four miles east of the town of Khost, killed two unidentified Pakistani nationals and one man from Yemen, said Khial Baz, a regional commander.

Baz said the fourth man was Bacha Malkhui, a former intelligence officer for the deposed Taliban government. He was driving the car.

“They were planning some kind of terrorist attack, but we don’t know what their target was,” Baz told The Associated Press by telephone from Khost.

Malkhui’s mother, who was passing by at the time, was wounded in the leg, Baz said.

Security forces found the vehicle’s charred remains near Malkhui’s house. Baz said the vehicle was a taxi and had come from across the border in neighboring Pakistan.

Security forces had been searching for Malkhui, after he was accused of firing two rockets toward a U.S. base in the same area a month ago, Baz said.

A search of his house overnight turned up two Kalashnikov assault rifles, Baz said.

Afghan authorities say Taliban remnants are reorganizing in an effort to destabilize the fledgling government of President Hamid Karzai.

Clashes with suspected Taliban fighters and security forces have broken out in recent weeks in northwest Badghis province as well as Paktika and Kandahar in the south.

Rockets are frequently fired at small U.S. military outposts scattered across eastern and southern Afghanistan, but they rarely cause casualties.

Coalition forces have about 11,500 soldiers in Afghanistan to hunt down remnants of the ousted Taliban regime and their allies.


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.