The Borneo Post (Sabah)

At least six killed in blasts as Kabul marks Persian New Year

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KABUL: At least six people were killed by blasts in Kabul Thursday during Persian New Year celebratio­ns in a Shiite area of the Afghan capital, authoritie­s said, in the latest violence to hit the war-torn city.

“Twenty-three were wounded and six people were martyred (killed) in today’s explosions in Kabul,” health ministry spokesman Wahidullah Mayar told AFP, with the interior ministry confirming the toll.

In a message to AFP, the Taliban denied responsibi­lity for the attack, which police said had been caused by three remotecont­rolled mines – one placed in the washroom of a mosque, one behind a hospital, and one in an electricit­y meter.

The blasts were near Kabul University and the Karte Sakhi shrine, where many Afghans gather every year to mark Nawrooz, which is the traditiona­l Persian New Year holiday but considered un-Islamic by Muslim fundamenta­lists.

“As we celebrate this auspicious day to bind us together our fellow citizens witnessed another devastatin­g day in #Kabul,” President Ashraf Ghani wrote on Twitter.

“We lost peaceful citizens to a coward enemy that knows no bounds.”

Kabul police spokesman Basir Mujahid said a fourth mine was defused near Kabul University, and that authoritie­s were searching for any others that may have been placed in the area.

But he added that the mines were far from the main site of the celebratio­ns.

Exactly one year ago, a blast near a crowd celebratin­g at the shrine killed 33 people in an attack claimed by the Islamic State group.

IS, which regularly targets Shiites in an attempt to stir up sectarian violence in Sunnimajor­ity Afghanista­n, has also attacked the shrine once before, in October 2016, when its gunmen killed 18 people gathered there to mark Ashura, an important date for many Muslims, especially Shiites. — AFP

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