Five Afghan volleyball players shot dead: Officials
MIHTARLAM, Afghanistan - Agence France-Presse
Afghan children play volleyball near Qargha lake, near Kabul, on Jan. 15. AFP photo
Gunmen shot dead five young Afghan men playing volleyball, officials said Jan. 24, but Taliban insurgents responsible for much of Afghanistan's unrest denied any involvement in the killings.Former warlord Ismail Khan, a vice-presidential candidate in the forthcoming April election, also escaped an apparent assassination attempt when a suicide bomber detonated himself outside a mosque after Friday prayers.
The volleyball players were gunned down in the eastern province of Laghman by attackers riding on a motorbike. "Armed men opened fire on a volleyball game. The players were young men, all innocent, and all of them were killed," Sarhadi Zwak, spokesman for Laghman's provincial governor, told AFP.
The Taliban regime between 1996-2001 banned volleyball and many other activities, but a spokesman for the group said it was not responsible for Thursday's deaths.
"We completely reject this allegation. We are not involved in this killing at all. Those who killed them are not our men," Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told AFP.
Some local reports said the victims had been playing cricket, but Habib-ul-Rahman, the governor of Alingar district where the attack took place, confirmed the provincial spokesman's account and death toll.
President Hamid Karzai condemned the attack and said such violence would not deter Afghans' search for peace and development.
Ismail Khan was unhurt when an elderly man triggered a suicide bomb in Herat - the western city where Khan is an influential figure.
"The attacker, who was an old man, detonated explosives strapped to his body near the entrance to the mosque after Ismail Khan came outside. There were no other casualties," Herat police spokesman Abdul Rauf Ahmadi told AFP.
In other violence, officials said the body of a murdered journalist was found in the southern province of Helmand. No group has claimed responsibility for his death.