The Standard (St. Catharines)

Bombing targets Afghan clerics calling for peace

- RAHIM FAIEZ AND AMIR SHAH

KABUL — A suicide bomber targeted a gathering of Afghanista­n’s top clerics on Monday, killing at least seven people and wounding 20 shortly after the religious leaders had issued a decree against such attacks and called for peace talks.

Ghafor Aziz, police chief of Kabul’s 5th District, said the bomber struck near the entrance of a compound where the religious body, known as the Afghan Ulema Council, was meeting. It was not clear how many of the clerics were among those killed or wounded.

No one immediatel­y claimed responsibi­lity for the attack.

Interior Ministry spokespers­on Najib Danish said one police officer was among those killed and two were among the wounded.

Public Health Ministry spokespers­on Wahid Majroh said the 20 wounded were taken to different hospitals and that the toll could rise.

Around 2,000 members of the council had gathered for the meeting, which was held beneath a large, traditiona­l tent.

Aziz said the bomber struck near the end of the meeting, as the participan­ts were about to leave.

Shortly before the attack, the clerics had issued an Islamic ruling, or a fatwa, declaring that suicide attacks are “haram” — forbidden under Islamic law.

The council called on the government, the Taliban and other militants to halt the fighting and enter peace negotiatio­ns.

It was the first time in the 17year war that the council has issued such an appeal.

Less than an hour before the attack happened, Ghofranull­ah Murad, a member of the council, read out a written statement from the gathering.

“The ongoing war in Afghanista­n is illegal and has no root in Sharia (Islamic) law,” the statement said.

“It is illegal according to Islamic laws and it does nothing but shed the blood of Muslims.”

“We the religious Ulema call on the Taliban to respond positively to the peace offer of the Afghan government in order to prevent further bloodshed in the country,” it added.

The fatwa also said that killing people by any means — such as bombs and suicide attacks — as well as violent acts like robbery and kidnapping, are sins in Islam.

Hours after the meeting, the Taliban issued a statement saying that their jihad, or holy war, in Afghanista­n is legitimate because it is being waged against U.S. invaders and their supporters.

It called the Ulema meeting “an American process, which was planned, organized, financed and led by the invaders.” It urged the clerics to instead side with the Taliban against the “occupation.”

The Taliban neverthele­ss denied involvemen­t in the attack. A powerful Islamic State affiliate has carried out a wave of attacks in recent months, and would also have been opposed to the fatwa.

Elsewhere in Kabul, three civilians, including a woman, were wounded when a sticky bomb attached to their car went off in the Koti Sangi area on Monday, said Hashmat Stanekzai, spokespers­on for the Kabul police chief.

The Taliban in April announced the start of their annual spring offensive, but in recent years, both the Taliban and the ISIL affiliate have carried out near-daily attacks through all seasons.

The Taliban have managed to seize control of several districts across the country and regularly target Kabul, the capital.

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