Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Suicide bomber kills 32 in Afghanista­n

Nearly 130 injured during protest rally

- By Sayed Salahuddin

KABUL, Afghanista­n — A suicide bomber targeted a protest rally in eastern Afghanista­n on Tuesday, killing 32 civilians, officials said, in the latest wave of spiraling violence in the country.

The strike intensifie­d questions about the ability of the government and the efficiency of U.S.-led troops who have been stationed in Afghanista­n in response to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, which were carried out by the al-Qaida network, then based in the country.

Nearly 130 other civilians were hurt in Tuesday’s strike, which occurred outside Jalalabad, the capital of Nangarhar province, near the border with Pakistan.

The provincial public health chief, Najibullah Kamawal, said 32 dead and 128 wounded were transporte­d to hospitals in Nangahar.

In addition, some people at the scene immediatel­y recovered the bodies of their relatives, he said, “so the fatalities may go up.”

Ahmed Ali Hazrat, head of the Nangarhar provincial council, also said the death toll may rise, as some of the wounded were in critical condition.

Mr. Hazrat said the protesters moved on to their rally even after the attack. Officials said several hundred people gathered to complain about a local police commander by blocking the main highway between Jalalabad and the Torkham crossing on the border with Pakistan.

“We are fed up with insecurity,” he said. “Attacks occur every day. And the government doesn’t pay attention.”

Hours earlier, several small explosions occurred near schools in various parts of Jalalabad, which has been the focus of deadly strikes by affiliates of the Islamic State terrorist group in recent months.

A 14-year-old student was killed, and at least four people were wounded in the first attack, officials said.

The Taliban, the main insurgent group fighting the Afghan government and foreign troops, distanced itself from the blasts.

No other group asserted responsibi­lity for any of Tuesday’s bombings.

In a statement, embattled President Ashraf Ghani condemned Tuesday’s suicide bombing.

“The enemies of Afghanista­n through such savagery cannot weaken the will of our people for a bright future and a stable country,” he said.

On Sunday, IS said one of its suicide bombers struck a convoy of gunmen who took to the streets in Kabul for hours to commemorat­e the death anniversar­y of legendary anti-Taliban commander Ahmed Shah Massoud.

The gunmen fired indiscrimi­nately, mostly into the air, disrupting the lives of tens of thousands of people during their tribute to Mr. Massoud.

Seven people in the convoy were killed, and more than 20 were wounded in the IS attack, officials said. Mr. Massoud was assassinat­ed by al-Qaida operatives posing as journalist­s on Sept. 9, 2001, in a resistance stronghold in northern Afghanista­n.

IS also claimed to have been behind two apparently coordinate­d attacks in which more than 20 people, including two Afghan journalist­s, perished last week in a largely Shiite part of the capital.

 ??  ?? Men shout slogans against terrorists after a suicide attack Tuesday among the protesters in Nangarhar province, Afghanista­n.
Men shout slogans against terrorists after a suicide attack Tuesday among the protesters in Nangarhar province, Afghanista­n.

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