Dayton Daily News

Separate Afghan attacks kill 48, according to authoritie­s

Taliban claims responsibi­lity for suicide bombings.

- By Rahim Faiez

— KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N Separate attacks by suicide bombers — one targeting President Ashraf Ghani’s election rally and a second that ripped through the center of the Afghan capital — killed at least 48 people and wounded scores more Tuesday in the deadliest single day since a peace agreement with Taliban insurgents was declared dead.

The Taliban claimed responsibi­lity for both blasts, saying an explosives-laden motorcycle targeted Ghani’s election rally being held on the outskirts of Charakar in northern Parwan province. Ghani was present but unhurt, his campaign chief said. In that explosion, 26 people were killed, according to Nasrat Rahimi, spokesman for the Interior Ministry. Four among the dead were Afghan military personnel, he said. Another 42 people were wounded, many of them women and children.

In the second bombing, just hours later in the heart of Kabul not far from the U.S. Embassy, the Taliban said they were targeting an Afghan army base. They killed 22 people, government officials said. Scores more were wounded.

The violence comes as Afghanista­n faces presidenti­al elections on Sept. 28 — a vote the Taliban vehemently oppose. The insurgent group has warned Afghans not to vote in the election and said their fighters would target election campaigns as well as polling stations.

The bomber who attacked Ghani’s rally detonated his explosives at the entrance to the rally, according to Hamed Aziz, a spokesman form Ghani’s campaign office. But Aziz said the explosion occurred some distance from where Ghani was addressing a crowd of about 2,200.

Ghani condemned both attacks.

“By continuing their crimes, the Taliban have once again proven that they have no will and desire for peace and stability in Afghanista­n and that all their movements are nothing but deceit,” Ghani was quoted as saying in a statement released by the presidenti­al palace.

There were many women and children among the casualties in the bombing near Ghani’s rally, said Dr. Qasim Sangin, a local official.

Local television footage of the attack showed twisted wreckage and charred remains of military and police vehicles that were apparently positioned near the powerful blast.

Firdaus Faramarz, spokesman for the Kabul police chief, said the attack in the heart of the Afghan capital took place near Massood Square, a deeply congested intersecti­on in the center of Kabul. NATO and U.S. compounds are located nearby as are several Afghan government ministries.

Zabihullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman, released a statement to the media saying Taliban suicide bombers were behind both attacks.

In Parwan, Mujahid said the bomber targeted presidenti­al guards who were protecting Ghani and the rally.

Campaignin­g for the Afghan elections resumed last week after President Donald Trump declared that the U.S.-Taliban talks, which have been going on for months in the Gulf Arab state of Qatar, are over.

Most presidenti­al candidates had suspended their campaigns while negotiatio­ns were taking place and as the U.S. peace envoy, Zalmay Khalilzad, said a deal was all but signed.

Trump’s tweets at the beginning of September declaring the deal and the talks were “dead” launched the war-battered nation on an election campaign.

Ghani, who had been sidelined during much of the talks between Khalilzad and the Taliban, resumed campaignin­g immediatel­y and had been steadfast in his demand that presidenti­al polls should take place.

 ?? RAHMAT GUL / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Afghans carry a wounded man into a hospital after a suicide attack Tuesday in northern Parwan province, Afghanista­n.
RAHMAT GUL / ASSOCIATED PRESS Afghans carry a wounded man into a hospital after a suicide attack Tuesday in northern Parwan province, Afghanista­n.

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