Houston Chronicle Sunday

ISIS claims bombing in Kabul; 80 killed

- By Mujib Mashal and Zahra Nader

The Islamic State claimed a bombing that left at least 80 people dead Saturday at a peaceful demonstrat­ion in the Afghan capital of Kabul, raising fears that the group may be extending its reach beyond the country’s eastern pockets, where it generally operates.

The Afghan Interior Ministry, in a statement, said the attack on thousands of Hazaras, an ethnic minority group staging the protest, had been a suicide mission.

“The attack was carried out by three suicide bombers: The first person carried out a blast, the second one failed at his detonation and the third terrorist was killed in shooting by the

security forces,” the ministry said.

The second assailant was presumed to be at large, a security official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to discuss intelligen­ce matters.

At least 231 people at the protest were wounded. The demonstrat­ors had gathered in the west of Kabul to demand that a proposed electricit­y transmissi­on line be routed through Bamian, a Hazara-dominated province in central Afghanista­n.

The Islamic State, in a statement on the group’s Amaq News Agency, claimed the carnage as a “martyrdom attack on Shias.”

Officials saw the Islamic State’s first assault on the Afghan capital as retaliatio­n for operations by Afghan ground forces and U.S. airstrikes that have intensifie­d in recent weeks, targeting the group’s stronghold in eastern Nangarhar province. ‘Cannot be justified’

Afghan security officials said that while Kabul remained under constant insurgent threat, they had no intelligen­ce of a particular threat to the protest. After the attack, officials intercepte­d informatio­n from Islamic State commanders in the Achin district, the group’s base in eastern Afghanista­n where villagers have been terrorized for months, congratula­ting each other for the carnage, the security official said.

President Ashraf Ghani, appearing on national television to announce a day of mourning, called the bombing a “cowardly attack on the freedoms of our citizens.” In meetings with religious leaders and his security team, he said the attack had been the work of the Islamic State.

Tadamichi Yamamoto, the U.N. envoy to Afghanista­n, said the deliberate targeting of a large group of civilians amounted to a war crime.

“This incident is an outrage that cannot be justified,” Yamamoto said. “It is an attempt to spread terror amongst civilians and stifle the freedoms that Af- ghans have sacrificed so much to obtain.”

Much of the city had been under lockdown before the protesters came out early Saturday. Ghani’s government had stacked shipping containers to block routes to the presidenti­al palace in anticipati­on of the demonstrat­ion.

The Hazaras have only in the past decade tried to shake off a long history of oppression. The protest leaders said the government remained rife with “systematic bias” against the Hazaras and had deprived the central Afghan region not only of electricit­y, but also of the roads and other infrastruc­ture.

The government has rejected the claims, saying the route of the transmissi­on line was decided purely on technical grounds and that Bamian would still be provided with electricit­y. (Government officials, who said they had increased efforts to address the plight of central Afghanista­n in the past two years, consider the protests manipulate­d by the political opposition.)

A sign printed on a piece of paper and held by an older woman proved hauntingly ominous: “Do not eliminate us,” it read.

After the explosion, pictures circulated of the sign covered in spots of blood and lying by the side of the road, next to a small green umbrella and human flesh. The fate of the woman was unclear.

Muhammad Ali, a protester whose clothes were covered in blood, said he had loaded dozens of dead bodies into trucks.

“People were going toward a prayer break when two explosions happened — one near the truck where speeches were given,” Ali said.

Hundreds of protesters re- turned to the site after the attack, cordoning off the area with a large Afghan flag they had carried in their march, lowering the cordon only to allow ambulances to pass. When the armored vehicle of a government official approached, angry men chased it away. As tempers flared at the government, protesters also pushed away antiriot police forces who had provided security earlier in the day.

Later in the evening, protest leaders argued around a candleligh­t vigil over whether to bury the dead or display their coffins at a protest in the coming days. The large flag, laid on the ground by then, became a display surface for objects left behind: women’s sneakers, notebooks, backpacks, articles of clothing. New brand of terror

Saturday’s attack was one of the deadliest in the past 15 years on the Hazaras, a largely Shiite group. In December 2011, a suicide bombing in a Shiite shrine in Kabul killed at least 63 people, mostly Hazaras.

The emergence of ISIS affiliates in late 2014 and early 2015 in eastern and small areas of southern Afghanista­n was seen as a splinterin­g in the Taliban insurgency. Though the new groups engaged in the Islamic State’s cruel style of violence, security officials said they saw little sign of communicat­ions with the terror network’s headquarte­rs in Iraq and Syria. Instead, the local groups were mostly former Pakistani and Afghan Taliban who had embraced the new brand of terror from a distance.

Ghani had declared ISIS affiliates in Afghanista­n defeated in March, but the group’s re-emergence forced him to travel to Nangarhar province just last week and order his commanders to intensify their efforts. Salim Khan Kunduzi, the governor of Nangarhar, said operations against the group were being carried out across several districts.

“We are fighting with our full force,” Kunduzi said. “The Afghan army, the Afghan air forces and commandos are fighting against them.”

 ?? Adam Ferguson photos / New York Times ?? An injured child is evacuated after a suicide bombing on Saturday targeted a demonstrat­ion by Hazaras, an ethnic minority group, in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
Adam Ferguson photos / New York Times An injured child is evacuated after a suicide bombing on Saturday targeted a demonstrat­ion by Hazaras, an ethnic minority group, in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
 ??  ?? This man was among the more than 200 who were wounded in the bombing, which officials say was in retaliatio­n for anti-ISIS operations by Afghan ground forces and U.S. airstrikes.
This man was among the more than 200 who were wounded in the bombing, which officials say was in retaliatio­n for anti-ISIS operations by Afghan ground forces and U.S. airstrikes.

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