Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Afghan suicide attack

- RAHIM FAIEZ

Police and firefighte­rs work at the site of a suicide attack in Jalalabad, Afghanista­n, on Sunday. The bombing targeted a group of Sikhs and Muslims on their way to meet Afghanista­n’s president and killed at least 19 people, including a longtime Sikh leader who had planned to run in the parliament­ary elections in October.

KABUL, Afghanista­n — A suicide bomber targeted a convoy of Sikhs and Hindus on their way to meet Afghanista­n’s president in the eastern city of Jalalabad on Sunday, killing at least 19 people.

Inamullah Miakhail, spokesman for the provincial hospital in Nangarhar, said that 17 out of 19 dead in the attack are from the minority Sikh and Hindu communitie­s.

Miakhail added that at least ten of the 20 wounded were also from the same minority groups and are undergoing treatment at a Jalalabad hospital.

Narendr Singh, one of the wounded Sikh from Sunday’s attack, told The Associated Press by phone from his hospital bed in Jalalabad that the attack targeted their convoy. He cried on the phone, worrying what had happened to his father, Avtar Singh Khalsa, who was also in the convoy.

Miakhail confirmed that Khalsa, a longtime leader of the Sikh community who had planned to run in the parliament­ary elections set for October, was killed in the attack.

Gen. Ghulam Sanayee Stanekzai, Nangarhar’s police chief, said that the attacker targeted the group on its way to the governor’s compound. They had planned to meet with President Ashraf Ghani, who was visiting the region on Sunday.

No one immediatel­y claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, but the Taliban and an Islamic State affiliate are active in the province.

Sikhs and Hindus have long suffered widespread discrimina­tion in the conservati­ve Muslim country and been targeted by Islamic extremists.

The community numbered more than 80,000 in the 1970s, but today only around 1,000 remain in the country. Under Taliban rule in the late 1990s, they were told to identify themselves by wearing yellow armbands, but the dictate was not wholly enforced. In recent years, large numbers of Sikhs and Hindus have sought asylum in India, which has a Hindu majority and a large Sikh population.

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AP

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