22 Jan 2018

Foreigners targeted in Kabul hotel attack

1:03 pm on 22 January 2018

At least 18 people have died in a Taliban attack on a hotel in Kabul, and a witness says foreigners were specifically targetted.

An Afghan security personnel stands guard as smoke billows from the Intercontinental Hotel during a fight between gunmen and Afghan security forces in Kabul on January 21, 2018.

An Afghan security personnel stands guard as smoke billows from the Intercontinental Hotel during a fight between gunmen and Afghan security forces in Kabul on January 21, 2018. Photo: AFP

Gunmen burst into the six-floor hotel at around 9pm (local time) on Saturday evening, as guests were enjoying dinner.

The shooters - armed with rocket-propelled grenades as well as smaller weapons - stormed through the hotel taking many of the guests hostage.

The 12-hour siege was eventually brought to an end by security forces.

An eyewitness has told the BBC of the terrifying moment gunmen burst into Kabul's Intercontinental Hotel restaurant.

The man, who is not being named for security reasons, said he was spared after saying he was an Afghan. "Where are the foreigners?" they shouted.

Fourteen foreigners are confirmed to have died, along with four Afghans.

The interior minister said the recent decision to transfer security to a private company had been a mistake.

Some 160 people were rescued after Afghan troops fought throughout the night to regain control of the building.

Three attackers were also killed in the siege, officials said. Ten people, including four civilians, were injured.

However, Reuters report that a senior Afghan security official said the death toll was over 30 and could climb higher.

Kabul police told the BBC that nine Ukrainians, one German, one Greek and one Kazakh citizen had been confirmed dead. Two have yet to be identified.

Afghan airline Kam Air said a number of its employees were killed and some were still missing.

The Taliban, which targeted the hotel in 2011, said it was behind the latest attack. A spokesman said in a statement quoted by news agency AFP that the group had "killed tens of foreign invaders and their puppets".

Gunmen 'ate before shooting'

The eyewitness told the BBC he was having dinner with his son when the gunmen began firing into the air with small arms.

They killed a woman - believed to be a foreigner - and turned the gun on the eyewitness himself.

He shouted "I'm Afghan". One of the gunmen shouted that they did not kill Afghans and demanded to know "Where are the foreigners?" The men then ran out of the room to look for them.

Haseeb, another eyewitness told Tolo News that two of the gunmen had asked him to serve them food first.

"They were wearing very stylish clothes," he said.

"They came to me and asked for food. I served them the food and they thanked me and took their seats. Then they took out their weapons and started shooting the people."

"There were dozens of dead bodies lying around me."

Several guests were pictured using bed sheets to try to climb down from a top-floor balcony.

Dramatic images on Afghan TV showed thick black smoke and flames rising from the imposing hilltop hotel.

Afghan special forces were lowered by helicopters on to the roof of the hotel during the night, an interior ministry spokesman said.

They worked with Western special forces to bring the siege to an end.

The ministry has promised an investigation into how the attackers breached security, which was handed to a private company two weeks ago.

Hotel manager Ahmad Haris Nayab said the gunmen had entered the hotel through a kitchen.

The Intercontinental is a state-owned hotel - not linked to the global hotel chain of the same name - which often hosts weddings, conferences and political gatherings.

Security has been tightened in Kabul since last May, when a huge truck bomb killed at least 150 people.

However, there have been several attacks in recent months. They include a bomb at a Shia cultural centre last month that killed more than 40 people.

Get the RNZ app

for ad-free news and current affairs