Times of Oman

At least six killed in Kabul suicide attack

The attack is the latest in a wave of violence across wartorn Afghanista­n as the Taliban intensify pressure on government security forces, which are suffering record high casualties

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KABUL: Six people were killed when a suicide bomber blew himself up in Kabul on Monday, close to where scores of Afghans had been protesting against Taliban attacks on the minority Hazara ethnic group.

The attack is the latest in a wave of violence across war-torn Afghanista­n as the Taliban intensify pressure on beleaguere­d government security forces, which are suffering record high casualties.

Interior ministry spokesman Najib Danish said 20 were wounded in the blast, which struck in front of a high school in the downtown area of the Afghan capital.

Initial reports indicated most of the victims were members of the security forces, but Danish said civilians, including several women, had borne the brunt of the carnage.

A photo shared on WhatsApp showed several bodies lying on the ground. “The suicide attacker on foot wanted to target protesters, but he was stopped at a security checkpoint some 200 metres (660 feet) from the site,” interior ministry deputy spokesman Nasrat Rahimi said.

A police officer at the scene said he saw 10 to 15 casualties on the ground, as well as body parts.

The centre of Kabul was blanketed with heavier-than-usual security for the protest, which began on Sunday night and continued into Monday.

“It was a huge blast near Istiqlal high school, very close to where the demonstrat­ors were gathering,” witness Qais Nawabi said.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the attack.

Demonstrat­ors, including university students, had taken to the streets to demand the deployment of military reinforcem­ents to two Hazara-dominated districts in the southeaste­rn province of Ghazni which have been attacked by the Taliban. In other violence, a Taliban attack on Khak Safid district in the western province of Farah overnight killed up to 40 local police and civilians, provincial council member Dadullah Qaneh said.

“They set the houses of local police members on fire, killed women and children and local police,” Qaneh said.

Provincial police spokesman Mohibullah Mohib confirmed the attack, but had no informatio­n on the number of casualties.

The Kabul explosion came as Afghan security forces step up ground and air offensives in Jaghori and Malistan districts, where Hazara pro-government fighters and Afghan troops are battling the militants. Fighting in the area has been ongoing since Wednesday, fanning fears that the violence could be rooted in ethnic or sectarian difference­s.

The Taliban have been accused of committing human rights violations against the group during their oppressive 1996-2001 rule.

“We have no news from our people living there,” Asif Ashna, one of the protesters, said in a Facebook live broadcast.

“If the government’s duty is to protect the lives of the people then why have they not taken any measures in the past week?”

Protester Ishaq Anis said that security forces should be permanentl­y based in Jaghori and Malistan to prevent “further attacks against Hazara people”. -

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/world

 ?? - AFP ?? ANXIOUS WAIT: Afghan medical staff members and relatives of blast victims wait outside an hospital of the Italian aid organisati­on ‘Emergency’ in Kabul on November 12, 2018.
- AFP ANXIOUS WAIT: Afghan medical staff members and relatives of blast victims wait outside an hospital of the Italian aid organisati­on ‘Emergency’ in Kabul on November 12, 2018.

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