Gunmen in Afghanistan kill 5 and wound Japanese doctor, officials say

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KABUL, Afghanistan — Gunmen opened fire at a car belonging to a Japanese physician and aid worker in eastern Afghanistan on Wednesday, seriously wounding him and killing five Afghans, including his bodyguards, the driver and a passenger, officials said.
The attack took place in Nangarhar province and targeted Japanese doctor Tetsu Nakamura as he was heading to the provincial capital, Jalalabad, according to the provincial governor’s spokesman, Attaullah Khogyani.
Nakamura was reported to be in critical condition and was undergoing surgery at a hospital. After that, he would be transferred to the capital, Kabul, for further treatment, said Gulzada Sanger, the hospital spokesman.
Nakamura has headed the Japanese charity Peace Medical Service in Nangarhar since 2008. He came to Afghanistan after a Japanese colleague, Kazuya Ito, was abducted and killed.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, the second in two weeks targeting aid workers in Afghanistan. The Taliban and the Islamic State group operate across the province.
Nangarhar police said that they were searching for the attackers, who fled the scene, and that an investigation was underway.
In late November, an American working for the United Nations mission in Afghanistan was killed and five Afghans, including two staff members of the mission, were wounded when a grenade hit a U.N. vehicle in Kabul.
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