The Columbus Dispatch

At least 20 killed in mosque attack

- By Amir Shah

KABUL, Afghanista­n — Militants stormed a packed Shiite mosque in the Afghan capital during Friday prayers, in an attack that lasted for hours and ended with at least 20 worshipper­s killed and another 50 seriously wounded, many of them children, an official said.

Two of the assailants blew themselves up and another two were shot to death by Afghan security forces, according to police official Mohammed Sadique Muradi.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, the latest to target Afghanista­n’s minority Shiites. The Taliban condemned the violence, with a spokesman for the militants, Zabihullah Mujahid, telling The Associated Press in a telephone interview that the group had nothing to do with it.

President Ashraf Ghani condemned the violence and said the militants were turning to attacking places of worship because they were losing on the battlefiel­d. He urged Islamic clerics everywhere to condemn the bloodshed.

The death toll of 20 was expected to rise because many of the victims were seriously wounded, said Mohammad Salim Rasouli, chief of Kabul’s hospitals.

Terrified worshipper­s endured about four harrowing hours of gunfire and explosions during the afternoon before the four attackers were killed.

The Islamic State said in a statement on the website of its Aamaq news agency that it had deployed two attackers to the mosque. There was no immediate explanatio­n for the contradict­ory number of attackers.

Security forces had surrounded the mosque in the northern Kabul neighborho­od but did not initially enter to prevent further casualties to the many worshipper­s inside, police official Mohammed Jamil said. Later, as police tried to advance, one of the attackers set off an explosion that forced them to withdraw, Muradi said.

The cleric who was performing the prayers was among the dead, said Mir Hussain Nasiri, a member of Afghanista­n’s Shiite clerical council. The gunmen had taken over both the cavernous prayer hall for the men and the separate, second-floor prayer area for the women, he said.

The mosque could accommodat­e up to 1,000 people, Nasir added.

When police initially tried to get inside, they discovered the militants had blocked the door leading to the second floor, turning the women upstairs into hostages, Nasir said.

“I was trying to escape over the wall when I saw my daughter, who was wounded, also trying to climb the wall,” one man who gave his name only as Bismillah told the AP.

“There was another girl who was shot in the head. I saw the body myself,” he said. “Finally I managed to escape with my daughter and a police escorted us to safety from the back of the mosque.”

On Thursday, Gen. John Nicholson, the top U.S. general in Afghanista­n, and Hugo Llorens, the U.S. Embassy’s special chargé d’affaires, told reporters in Kabul that the new U.S. strategy was a promise to Afghans that together they would defeat terrorism and prevent terrorist groups from establishi­ng safe havens.

 ??  ?? A man shouts slogans against the Afghan president after he ran out of the Shiite mosque during the attack in Kabul. Gunmen stormed the mosque while worshipper­s were at Friday prayers, setting off an explosion that killed a security guard outside and...
A man shouts slogans against the Afghan president after he ran out of the Shiite mosque during the attack in Kabul. Gunmen stormed the mosque while worshipper­s were at Friday prayers, setting off an explosion that killed a security guard outside and...

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