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The Washington Times Online Edition

7,000 police hit streets of Kabul

An Afghan police officer frisks an Afghan man at a checkpoint Sunday in Kabul. Police were deployed around Afghanistan's capital after authorities ordered the city secured ahead of the country's Independence Day. (Associated Press)An Afghan police officer frisks an Afghan man at a checkpoint Sunday in Kabul. Police were deployed around Afghanistan’s capital after authorities ordered the city secured ahead of the country’s Independence Day. (Associated Press)

KABUL, Afghanistan | The Afghan police ordered 7,000 officers onto the streets of Kabul to guard against attacks on senior leaders during Independence Day celebrations Monday, responding to signs of the Taliban’s growing strength near the capital.

Even the location of the celebration of Afghanistan’s 89th anniversary of independence from Britain was kept secret and will be closed to the public to try to minimize the risk insurgents could again disrupt a national commemoration.

In April, gunmen in a rented hotel room fired on Afghan President Hamid Karzai at a military parade in Kabul as he sat in the review stands. Mr. Karzai escaped injury, but the attack killed three people, including a lawmaker.

Taliban violence has spiked across Afghanistan in recent days, including an ambush on a NATO convoy on Sunday, attacks on police checkpoints and a roadside bomb targeting a police convoy. More than 90 people were killed over four days - most of them reportedly Taliban insurgents.

Kabul so far has been spared the violence afflicting much of Afghanistan, but there are signs the Taliban and other militant groups have gained a foothold in neighboring provinces. And the capital suffered spectacular bomb attacks this year against an international hotel and the Indian Embassy.

Interior Ministry spokesman Zemarai Bashary said more than 5,000 extra police were drafted for what he described as the biggest operation of its kind in Kabul since 2001, when U.S.-led forces ousted the Taliban government.

The Interior Ministry said the capital’s police would search buildings and cars to “prevent any disruptive actions by the enemy.”

A lawmaker from Kandahar who is critical of Mr. Karzai’s government said the police deployment has more to do with protecting the government’s reputation than reassuring the public.

“Unless they bring some comprehensive changes in the security, this deployment will not affect people’s confidence,” Khalid Pashtun said.

Mr. Pashtun said there has been a steady increase in kidnappings, robberies and other crimes this year.

“People are afraid to leave their house after 7 p.m.,” he said.

One policeman deployed near a wide avenue where gunmen shot at Mr. Karzai in April was 22-year-old police recruit Farid Ahmad.

“I am still a student, but this was an order from the commander of the academy that we should come out and search the vehicles,” he said.

In an ambush last week, insurgents wielding assault rifles gunned down three female aid workers about an hour’s drive south of Kabul.

To the west, insurgents have been attacking U.S.-led coalition and NATO supply convoys, burning fuel trucks and killing NATO and coalition soldiers.

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