Cape Times

Death toll from 2 Afghan blasts reaches 50

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KABUL: Afghan security officials began investigat­ing Tuesday’s attacks in the capital and the southern city of Kandahar as the death toll climbed to 50.

The Ministry of Public Health raised the death toll from the Kabul attack to 37, with 98 wounded, while 13 people were confirmed dead in Kandahar.

One security official said the death toll from the Kabul incident alone could reach as high as 45-50 with more than 100 wounded.

The violence highlights the precarious security situation in Afghanista­n, which has seen a steady increase in attacks since internatio­nal troops ended combat operations in 2014, with record numbers of civilian casualties.

Many of the Kabul victims were workers in parliament­ary offices who were returning home in the afternoon rush hour or first responders hit when they were attending victims of an initial blast.

The Taliban, seeking to reimpose Islamic law after their ousting in 2001, claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, which they said targeted a minibus carrying personnel from the National Directorat­e for Security, Afghanista­n’s main intelligen­ce agency.

But they denied responsibi­lity for the attack in Kandahar which killed mainly government officials or diplomats from the United Arab Emirates who were visiting the city to open an orphanage.

President Ashraf Ghani’s national security adviser, Hanif Atmar, travelled to Kandahar yesterday to launch an investigat­ion.

Five Emirati officials as well as the deputy governor of Kandahar, Abdul Shamsi, and a number of other senior officials were among the dead. No claim of responsibi­lity has been made for the attack, set off by a bomb hidden under sofas in the residence of the provincial governor.

However, Kandahar police chief Abdul Razeq, a feared commander who was in the compound when the explosion occurred but who escaped injury, accused Pakistan’s intelligen­ce services and the Haqqani network, a militant group linked to the Taliban.

He said workers may have smuggled in the explosives used in the attack during constructi­on and said a number of people had been held for questionin­g.

The UN condemned the “unprincipl­ed, unlawful and deplorable attacks” which it said would make peace more difficult to achieve.

“Those responsibl­e for these attacks must be held accountabl­e,” said Pernille Kardel, the UN secretary-general’s Deputy Special Representa­tive for Afghanista­n.

On the same day as the two bomb attacks, seven people were killed in a Taliban ground attack on a security unit in the highly restive southern province of Helmand.

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? Men carry the coffin of a relative who died in one of Tuesday’s two bombings in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
PICTURE: AP Men carry the coffin of a relative who died in one of Tuesday’s two bombings in Kabul, Afghanista­n.

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