Afghanistan’s Kapisa province: at least 5 killed in bomb attack

GlobalPost

A bomb attack at a bazaar in Afghanistan's eastern Kapisa province today has killed at least five people, The Associated Press cited local officials as saying

Kapisa is among a number of designated areas in which Afghan forces are taking over security from NATO troops, according to The LA Times

The provincial police chief and the Interior Ministry told The LA Times that the attack, which was set off by remote-control in the district of Tagab, killed four members of the Afghan Local Police, a group trained by the US, as well as two civilians.

Among the dead was the son of one of the officers, according to BBC News.

More from GlobalPost: France to pull Afghanistan troops starting in July

Provincial leader Hussain Khan Sanjani told AP that the explosion went off mid-morning and left over a dozen people wounded. 

Afghanistan continues to see frequent extremist-led attacks, and the high level of violence has worried authorities as international forces prepare to fully withdraw from the country by 2014. 

Today's attack also comes a week after a suicide bombing in Afghanistan left four French troops dead, prompting French President Francois Hollande to advance the nation's troop pullout date.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for today's attack. 

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