The Columbus Dispatch

Attack in Kabul kills 18; al-qaida leader is slain

- Tameem Akhgar

KABUL, Afghanista­n – The death toll from a suicide attack Saturday in Afghanista­n’s capital has risen to at least 18 killed and 57 people wounded, including students, the interior ministry said.

Afghan security officials separately announced Saturday that a senior alQaida commander had been killed in a recent operation in the country’s east.

Saturday’s explosion in the capital struck outside an education center in a heavily Shiite neighborho­od of western Kabul, Dasht-e-barchi.

Interior Ministry spokesman Tariq Arian says that the attacker was trying to enter the center when he was stopped by security guards.

According to Arian, the casualty toll may rise further as family members of victims of the suicide bombing are still searching the several different hospitals where the wounded have been taken.

No group claimed immediate responsibi­lity for the bombing. The Taliban rejected any connection with the attack.

An Islamic State affiliate claimed responsibi­lity for a similar suicide attack at an education center in August 2018, in which 34 students were killed. Within Afghanista­n, IS has launched largescale attacks on minority Shiites, Sikhs and Hindus, whom it views as apostates or infidels.

Hundreds of Sikhs and Hindus in Afghanista­n fled the country in September after a gunman loyal to the militant group killed 25 members of the shrinking community in an attack on their shared place of worship in Kabul.

Meanwhile, the Afghan intelligen­ce service said in a tweet that special forces killed al-qaida’s No. 2 commander for the Indian sub-continent, Abu Muhsin al-masri, in a recent operation in eastern Ghazni. The National Directorat­e of Security did not immediatel­y share more details about the operation.

Al-masri was listed among the most wanted terrorists by the U.S. Department of Justice in 2018.

The U.S. signed a peace deal with the Taliban in February, opening a path toward withdrawin­g American troops from the conflict. U.S. officials said the deal also aimed refocus security efforts on fighting the Islamic State, which is a rival of the Taliban in Afghanista­n.

There has been an upsurge in violence between Taliban and Afghan forces in the country recently, even as representa­tives from the two warring sides begin their own peace talks in Doha to end the decadeslon­g war in Afghanista­n.

Earlier Saturday in eastern Afghanista­n, a roadside bomb killed nine people in a minivan full of civilians, a local official said.

Ghazni province police spokesman Ahmad Khan Sirat said that a second roadside bomb killed two policemen in their vehicle as they their way to the victims of the first explosion.

Sirat added that the bombings had wounded several others, and that the attacks were under investigat­ion.

No one immediatel­y claimed responsibi­lity for the attacks. The provincial police spokesman claimed the Taliban had placed the bomb.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States