Toronto Star

63 killed in suicide bombing at Kabul wedding

Daesh affiliate claims deadliest attack in Afghan capital this year

- RAHIM FAIEZ AND CARA ANNA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The suicide bomber stood in the middle of the dancing, clapping crowd as hundreds of Afghan children and adults celebrated a wedding in a joyous release from Kabul’s strain of war. Then, in a flash, he detonated his explosives-filled vest, killing dozens — and Afghanista­n grieved again.

The local Daesh affiliate claimed responsibi­lity for the deadliest attack in the capital this year, with 63 killed and 182 wounded, while outraged Afghans questioned just how safe they will be under an approachin­g deal between the United States and the Taliban to end America’s longest war.

Stunned families buried the dead, some digging with their bare hands. One wounded survivor, Mohammad Aslim, still wore his bloodied clothes the day after the blast late Saturday. He and his friends had already buried 16 bodies, among them several close relatives, including a 7-year-old boy.

Aslim looked exhausted, and said he was waiting to bury more. Nearby, a man named Amanullah, who lost his 14-year-old son, said in anguish that the explosion had mangled the boy’s face so badly he could no longer recognize it.

“I wish I could find the pieces of my son’s body and put them as one piece into the grave,” he cried.

The emergence of the Daesh affiliate in recent years might be the greatest threat to Afghan civilians as the U.S. and Taliban seek an agreement to end nearly 18 years of fighting.

While the U.S. wants Taliban assurances that Afghanista­n will no longer be used as a launch pad for global terror attacks, there appear to be no guarantees of protection for Afghan civilians.

The Taliban, which the U.S. hopes will help curb the Daesh affiliate’s rise, condemned Saturday’s attack as “forbidden and unjustifia­ble.”

The blast took place in a western Kabul neighbourh­ood that is home to many in the country’s minority Shiite Hazara community. Daesh, which declared war on Afghanista­n’s Shiites nearly two years ago and has claimed responsibi­lity for many attacks targeting them in the past, said in a statement that a Pakistani Daesh fighter seeking martyrdom targeted a large Shiite gathering.

The wedding, at which more than 1,200 people had been invited, was in fact a mixed crowd of Shiites and Sunnis, said the event hall’s owner, Hussain Ali.

Ali’s workers were still finding body parts, including hands, in the shattered wedding hall, its floor strewn with broken glass, pieces of furniture and victims’ shoes.

“We have informed the police to come and collect them,” he said.

The bomber detonated his explosives near the stage where musicians were playing and “all the youths, children and all the people who were there were killed,” said Gul Mohammad, another witness.

Survivors described a panicked scene in the suddenly darkened hall as people screamed and scrambled to find loved ones.

“I was with the groom in the other room when we heard the blast and then I couldn’t find anyone,” said Ahmad Omid, who said the groom was his father’s cousin. “Everyone was lying all around the hall.”

The blast at the wedding hall, known as Dubai City, shattered a period of relative calm in Kabul.

On Aug. 7, a Taliban car bomber aimed at Afghan security forces detonated his explosives on the same road, a short drive from the hall, killing 14 people and wounding 145 — most of them women, children and other civilians.

Kabul’s huge, brightly lit wedding halls are centres of community life in a city weary of decades of war, with thousands of dollars often spent on a single evening.

Messages of shock poured in on Sunday. “Such acts are beyond condemnati­on,” the European Union mission to Afghanista­n said. “An act of extreme depravity,” U.S. Ambassador John Bass said. A deliberate attack on civilians “can only be described as a cowardly act of terror,” UN envoy to Afghanista­n Tadamichi Yamamoto said. The explosion came just ahead of Afghanista­n’s 100th Independen­ce Day on Monday. The city, long familiar with checkpoint­s and razor wire, has been under heavier security. A planned event in Kabul marking the anniversar­y was postponed because of the attack, the president’s office said.

The attack also comes at a greatly uncertain time in Afghanista­n as the U.S. and the Taliban appear to be within days of a deal on ending the war after several rounds of talks this year. Afghanista­n’s government has been sidelined in those talks as the Taliban refuse to negotiate with what it calls a U.S. puppet.

The U.S. envoy in the talks, Zalmay Khalilzad, said on Twitter Sunday that the peace process needs to be accelerate­d, including holding talks between the Taliban and the Afghan government and other Afghans. He said that will put Afghanista­n in a “much stronger position” to defeat the Daesh affiliate. U.S. President Donald Trump was briefed on the talks on Friday but few details have emerged.

Top issues in the talks have included a U.S. troop withdrawal and Taliban guarantees they would not allow Afghanista­n to become a launching pad for global terror attacks. In that, the Daesh affiliate’s increasing­ly threatenin­g presence is the top U.S. concern. Other issues include a cease-fire and intraAfgha­n negotiatio­ns on the country’s future.

Many Afghans fear that terror attacks inside the country will continue, and their pleas for peace — and for details on the talks — have increased in recent days. Few appear to believe that the Taliban will step in to protect civilians from Daesh or anyone else after years of killing civilians themselves. “Taliban cannot absolve themselves of blame, for they provide platform for terrorists,” President Ashraf Ghani said on Twitter, declaring a day of mourning and calling the attack “inhumane.”

 ?? JIM HUYLEBROEK THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A cousin of the bride grieves after losing his brother in Saturday’s suicide bombing in Kabul.
JIM HUYLEBROEK THE NEW YORK TIMES A cousin of the bride grieves after losing his brother in Saturday’s suicide bombing in Kabul.

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