Blast outside Kabul’s military airport, multiple casualties — Afghan interior ministry

In this file photo taken on September 12, 2021, Afghan Border National Police personnel stand guard outside the airport in Kabul. (Photo courtesy: AFP/File)
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Updated 01 January 2023
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Blast outside Kabul’s military airport, multiple casualties — Afghan interior ministry

  • Local residents heard a loud explosion in the vicinity of the military side of the heavily fortified airport
  • The Taliban-run administration has been facing a bloody insurgency waged by the Daesh militant group

KABUL: An explosion outside the military airport in Kabul on Sunday has caused multiple casualties, a spokesman for the Taliban-run interior ministry said.

“Today morning an explosion took place outside Kabul military airport, due to which a number of our citizens were martyred and injured,” spokesman Abdul Nafi Takor told Reuters, adding that investigations are under way.

He did not specify the nature or target of the explosion.

Local residents said a loud explosion was heard before 8 am in the vicinity of the military side of the heavily fortified airport.

They said the area had been sealed off by security forces, and all roads had been closed.

The Taliban-run administration has been faced with a bloody insurgency waged by the Daesh militant group, which has in recent weeks targeted a number of key installations in Kabul, including the Russian and Pakistani embassies as well as the office of the country’s former prime minister.


Madagascar’s leader fires prime minister, cabinet

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Madagascar’s leader fires prime minister, cabinet

  • Col. Michael Randrianirina came to power after demonstrations that started in September snowballed into a protest movement
ANTANANARIVO: Madagascar’s leader, Col. Michael Randrianirina, has sacked his prime minister and dissolved the cabinet he appointed soon after seizing power following youth-led protests five months ago.
The colonel chose Herintsalama Rajaonarivelo, from the private sector, as prime minister after a military power grab that sent former president Andry Rajoelina fleeing in October.
Randrianirina “announces that, in accordance with the provisions of the constitution, the government is suspended from its duties,” a presidency spokesperson said in a statement Monday.
A new prime minister will be appointed “shortly,” he said, without providing a timeline or a reason for the dismissal.
Randrianirina came to power after demonstrations started in September against persistent water and power shortages and snowballed into a protest movement that the government tried to stop with a crackdown, leaving many people dead and injured.
The colonel has denied staging a coup, insisting the Constitutional Court “transferred power” to him, and has pledged a two-year transition period, according to a program released at the end of February.
An initial phase of wide-ranging consultations until the end of 2026 was scheduled to lead to a draft new constitution and a presidential election due in the last quarter of 2027.
The African Union Peace and Security Council (PSC) was due to convene a meeting Tuesday on Madagascar, marking its fourth since October.
Randrianirina has moved swiftly to court new diplomatic alliances, declaring a “new era of cooperation” during an official visit to Moscow last month where he was received by President Vladimir Putin.
Days later in Paris, he and President Emmanuel Macron announced a “renewed” and “balanced” partnership with France, the former colonial power.