An insurgent killed two people in the Afghan defence ministry today in the third attack on security installations in four days.
A man in an Afghan army uniform opened fire in the ministry in central Kabul, killing two employees and wounding seven, said a defence ministry spokesman.
The man was also wearing a suicide-bomb belt, but did not have time to detonate it, said the spokesman, who had earlier described the man as a soldier rather than an insurgent in army uniform. "The attacker was shot dead before he set off his explosives, and the situation is normal," he said.
The Taliban claimed responsibility for today's attack on the ministry, saying they were targeting planned meetings with French defence minister Gerard Longuet, who is visiting Afghanistan.
The French embassy said the minister was not in the building at the time of the shooting, but declined further comment on his schedule.
The wounded included an assistant to the defence minister and secretary of the army chief of staff, said Afghanistan's Tolo TV, quoting unidentified ministry sources.
The defence ministry lies near the presidential palace and several other ministries. The road leading to the building was closed off today, with even ministry employees turned away, but the ministry spokesman said the situation was now under control.
The attack comes months before the start of a transfer of security responsibilities from foreign to Afghan forces, and after Nato troops claimed solid progress in efforts to bolster the numbers and quality of the Afghan police and army.
Under the gradual transition programme, Afghan forces will begin by taking over from foreign troops in just a few areas, but should have control of the whole country by the end of 2014.
But in recent days militants in security uniforms, or soldiers gone "rogue", have penetrated some of the most important police and army installations in the country, in attacks likely to compound worries about the security handover.
Afghan forces are already riddled with problems, ranging from illiteracy to shortages of equipment and leaders, that will make meeting the 2014 deadline a challenge.
On Saturday, a suicide bomber in an Afghan army uniform got into a sprawling desert base in the east of the country and killed five foreign and four Afghan soldiers, the highest toll of Nato-led troops in a single attack for several months.
Last Friday, a suicide bomber in police uniform evaded tight security at the police headquarters in Kandahar city and killed Khan Mohammad Mujahid, the police chief in the southern province of Kandahar.
Both places are ringed by formidable defences, but cash or commitment to the insurgent cause rendered the walls useless at keeping out militants.
Reuters