http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/11/09/asia/afghan.php
Suicide attack in Afghanistan killed 59 schoolchildren The Associated Press Friday, November 9, 2007 KABUL: A suicide attack in northern Afghanistan this week killed 59 schoolchildren and wounded 96 others, the Education Ministry said Friday. The schoolchildren were lined up to greet a group of lawmakers visiting a sugar factory in the northern province of Baghlan on Tuesday when a suicide bomber detonated explosives. In total, 75 people were killed in the attack, including several members of Parliament. Fifty-nine schoolchildren aged 8 to 18 and five teachers were among those killed in the attack, said Zahoor Afghan, an Education Ministry spokesman. The attack was the deadliest in the country since the toppling of the Taliban regime in the 2001 U.S.-led invasion. "The education minister has ordered that no children should be ever again be used in these sort of events," Afghan said. President Hamid Karzai declared three days of mourning Wednesday and ordered an investigation. No group has claimed responsibility, and the Taliban have denied any involvement. NATO and Afghan troops, meanwhile, battled Taliban fighters near Gulistan District, in western Farah Province, on Friday. The soldiers seized the district center after it was overrun by militants last week, said Bariyalai Khan, spokesman for the provincial police chief. In southern Zabul Province, Taliban militants on motorbikes ambushed and killed Shahjoy's district chief and two of his bodyguards on Thursday, said Muhammad Rasool Khan, a district police chief. The victims were shopping in a market when four militants on two motorbikes shot them dead, Khan said. U.S.-led coalition forces and Afghan troops, meanwhile, clashed with Taliban insurgents in the Nahr Surk District of Helmand Province on Wednesday, leaving several militants dead, a coalition statement said. The joint force was conducting a reconnaissance patrol near the district when insurgents engaged them with machine guns, rocket propelled grenades and small-arms fire, the statement said. "The combined force immediately engaged the Taliban fighters with small-arms fire and close air support, killing many of the insurgents before they fled the area," it said. Violence in Afghanistan this year has been the deadliest since the Taliban's ouster. More than 5,700 people, mostly militants, have died so far in insurgency-related violence, according to an Associated Press count based on figures from Afghan and Western officials.