Incident Summary:

02/26/2008: In Sabrio District of Khost Province, Afghanistan, 5 police officers, all related, were on their way to work when a remote-controlled roadside bomb exploded, killing them all. A police unit commander, one of his two sons, and three of his nephews were the victims. Also killed in this attack was a 9 year old boy, the police unit commander's second son. Taliban spokesman Zabeehullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for this attack.

GTD ID:
200802260008

When:
2008-02-26

Country:
Afghanistan

Region:
South Asia

Province/administrative
region/u.s. state:

Khost

City:
Sabari district

Attack Information
Type of Attack (more) Bombing/Explosion
Successful Attack? (more) Yes
Target Information (more)
Target Type: Police
Name of Entity Afghani Police
Specific Description A family of Afghan police officers
Nationality of Target Afghanistan
Additional Information
Hostages No
Ransom No
Property Damage No
Weapon Information
Type Sub-type
Explosives Remote Trigger
Additional Information
Suicide Attack?No
Part of Multiple Incident?No
Criterion 1 (more) Yes
Criterion 2 (more) Yes
Criterion 3 (more) Yes
Doubt Terrorism Proper (more) No
Additional Information The 9 year old victim seemed to be collateral damage as he usually did not travel with this law enforcement relatives.
Perpetrator Group Information
Group Name Claimed Responsibility
Taliban Yes (Confirmed: Unknown; Mode: Personal claim)
Perpetrator Statistics
Number of Perpetrators Unknown
Number of Captured Perpetrators 0
Casualty Information
Total Number of Casualties 6 Fatalities / 0 Injured
Total Number of Fatalities 6
Number of U.S. Fatalities 0
Number of Perpetrator Fatalities 0
Total Number of Injured 0
Number of U.S. Injured 0
Number of Perpetrators Injured 0
Sources
“Bomb kills five Afghan policemen, one child,” Agence France Presse, February 26, 2008.
“ROUNDUP: Five police offices and child killed in Afghan roadside bomb,” Deutsche Presse-Agentur, February 26, 2008.
"Officer among five policemen killed in Afghan blast,” Suna News Agency, February 26, 2008.