The Borneo Post

Kabul mourns loss of ‘invincible hero’ in suicide blast

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KABUL: Whenever suicide attackers struck his fellow Shiites in Kabul, Wakil Hussain Allahdad would drop what he was doing and rush to the scene to help rescue survivors and carry away the dead.

But on Sunday Allahdad himself became a victim, fatally wounded in the devastatin­g blast outside a voter registrati­on centre in the Afghan capital.

The suicide attack, claimed by the Islamic State group, killed at least 57 people and wounded more than 100, making it the deadliest assault in the war-weary city since a bomb-laden ambulance exploded in January.

Allahdad had been serving customers in his photograph­y shop across the street when the bomber blew himself up in a crowd waiting to pick up their national identifica­tion certificat­es, Allahdad’s older brother, Ghulam Sakhi Allahdad, told AFP on Monday.

The father of four had opened the shop recently in the hope of cashing in on a surge in demand for passport- sized photos, as people rushed to get the national IDs needed to register to vote in legislativ­e elections scheduled for October.

Unconsciou­s and bleeding profusely from his head and mouth, 32-year- old Allahdad was taken to Isteqlal hospital before being transferre­d to a trauma facility run by Italian NGO Emergency where he died.

His two colleagues and several customers were also killed by the blast that caused carnage in the street, where pools of blood and body parts mixed with shattered glass and blood-stained photos. A female customer was wounded.

Allahdad, who was also a competitiv­e wrestler, was well known in Kabul’s Shiite community.

After witnessing the deaths of friends in an IS- claimed suicide bomb targeting Shiite ethnic Hazaras in July 2016, he made a pledge to assist victims of future attacks, his younger brother, Ahmad Hussain Allahdad, told AFP.

Since then IS militants, who belong to the Sunni branch of Islam, have repeatedly targeted Kabul’s Shiites as they seek to stir up sectarian violence.

Each time they struck, Allahdad would race to help.

“He was always there for his people. Whenever there was a terrorist incident he would drop everything and rush to the scene,” Ghulam Sakhi Allahdad said.

“He would save anyone regardless of who they were.”

Huge posters paying tribute to Allahdad and other victims of Sunday’s attack hung in the streets of the neighbourh­ood where the blast happened. — AFP

 ??  ?? A Sukhoi Su-22 Syrian army plane releases bombs over southern Damascus in the area of Yarmuk Palestinia­n refugee camp. — AFP photo
A Sukhoi Su-22 Syrian army plane releases bombs over southern Damascus in the area of Yarmuk Palestinia­n refugee camp. — AFP photo

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