Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday strongly condemned the Kabul attack which left at least two people dead. An attack at the American University in Kabul ended after two attackers were killed, police said early today, nearly 10hours after militants stormed the complex.
"We have ended our clean-up operation. Two attackers were gunned down," Fraidoon Obaidi, chief of Kabul police's Criminal Investigation Department, told AFP without offering any details on the casualties.
Explosions and gunfire rocked the American University of Afghanistan in Kabul on Wednesday, leaving at least two people dead and five injured, media reports said.
The attack which started right after a bomb blast on Wednesday evening went on for almost an hour, during which hundreds of students and faculty remained trapped inside, an official said.
“I heard explosions and gunfire is going on close by... our class is filled with smoke and dust,” a desperate student told AFP by telephone.“We are stuck inside and very afraid.”
Many other trapped students were tweeting desperate messages for help. Among them was Associated Press photojournalist Massoud Hossaini.
Hossaini later successfully escaped along with nine students. Soon after, almost 100 students followed them to safety. No militant group has so far claimed responsibility for the attack, which comes as the Taliban step up their summer fighting season against the Western-backed Kabul government.
“#AUAF under attack. I along with my friends escaped and several other of my friends and professors trapped inside,” Kabul-based journalist Ahmad Mukhtar tweeted.
The Italian-run Emergency Hospital in Kabul tweeted that at least five wounded people had been brought to the facility for treatment.
The management of the elite American University of Afghanistan, which opened in 2006 and enrols more than 1,700 students, was not immediately reachable for comment.
The private university is usually packed with students in the evening, many of them working professionals doing part-time courses at the facility.
The assault comes after two professors at the university - an American and Australian - were kidnapped in the heart of Kabul earlier this month, the latest in a series of abductions of foreigners in the conflict-torn country.
No group has publicly claimed the abductions so far. The Afghan capital is infested with organised criminal gangs who stage kidnappings for ransom, often targeting foreigners and wealthy Afghans, and sometimes handing them over to insurgent groups.
It appeared to be the first reported abduction related to a private university in Afghanistan.
The Taliban have stepped up nationwide attacks.
Afghan forces backed by US troops are seeking to head off a potential Taliban takeover of Lashkar Gah, the capital of the southern opium-rich province of Helmand as fighting intensifies.
A roadside bomb killed an American soldier yesterday near the city, and left another American and six Afghan soldiers wounded, the US-led NATO coalition said.
The turmoil convulsing Helmand, blighted by a huge opium harvest that helps fund the insurgency, underscores a rapidly unravelling security situation in Afghanistan.
Fighting has left thousands of people displaced in Helmand in recent weeks, sparking a humanitarian crisis as officials report food and water shortages. (With PTI Inputs)
#WATCH Visuals from the site of attack at American University in Kabul, security forces keep watch at the site.https://t.co/mtMhDLFlg9
— ANI (@ANI_news) August 24, 2016
We strongly condemn the attack on American University in Kabul. Condolences to the bereaved families & prayers with the injured.
— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) August 25, 2016