Millennium Post

KABUL CAR BOMB ATTACK KILLS 35

-

KABUL: The Taliban has claimed responsibi­lity for a car bombing in Kabul that left at least 35 people dead, as it ratchets up an offensive across Afghanista­n. The bomb hit a bus ferrying employees of the ministry of mines. The blast occurred at around 6:40 am local time (10:10 pm ET) on Monday, when a Toyota Corolla exploded in the city’s west, Afghan Interior Ministry spokesman Najib Danish told CNN.

It is the latest in a string of attacks in recent days by the Taliban, which said it had captured two districts in northern and central Afghanista­n at the weekend. In a statement released by Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid, the group said the Kabul bomb’s target was a bus carrying Afghan intelligen­ce staff, but Danish said that all the victims were civilians, including some employees of the Ministry of Mining and Petroleum. Women and children were among the dozens injured, Danish said. Saleem Rasooli, head of Kabul hospitals, put the death toll at 29 and said at least 40 others were injured in the blast.

A witness told CNN he saw injured people in the streets and others yelling in the bombing’s aftermath. “In the morning I was sleeping when I heard a loud boom, which woken me up,” said 33-year-old Safiullah, who gave only his first name.

He looked out of a window in his home and saw plumes of smoke rising from the site as people ran in a panic.

Family members and friends searched for loved ones in the commotion that followed. One shopkeeper, who appeared to be in a state of shock and said he had forgotten his own name, was looking for a friend.

His clothes were covered in blood as he answered calls from the missing friend’s family.“i lost my friend, and I am searching the dead bodies,” he said. “I went to three hospitals, but he wasn’t there. What should I tell his family?”

Afghanista­n’s Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah and President Ashraf Ghani both condemned the attack.

“I strongly condemn the terrorist attack on civil servants in Kabul today (Monday), ” Abdullah said in a tweet.

“Our security institutes will hold perpetrato­rs accountabl­e.”

Ghani’s office said in statement: “The enemy of Afghanista­n can’t face our forces in battle field so they target innocent civilians.”the uptick in violence comes as US President Donald Trump mulls sending more troops to Afghanista­n, amid no signs that the Taliban is weakening. There are about 8,400 US troops in the country at the moment.

 ??  ?? An Afghan security official inspecting the scene of the suicide bombing
An Afghan security official inspecting the scene of the suicide bombing

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India