The Phnom Penh Post

More than 30 killed in blast targeting Kabul girls’ school

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ABLAST outside a girls’ school in an area of the Afghan capital populated largely by the Shiite Hazara community on May 8 killed more than 30 people including students and wounded scores more, officials said.

The explosion rocked the west Kabul district of Dashte-Barchi – a regular target of Sunni Islamist militants – as residents were out shopping ahead of next week’s Eid-alFitr, which marks the end of Ramadan, the Muslim holy month of fasting.

It comes as the US military continues to pull out its last 2,500 troops from violencewr­acked Afghanista­n, despite faltering peace efforts between the Taliban and Afghan government to end a decades-long war.

“More than 30 students and other countrymen have been killed, and over 50 more were wounded. The toll is rising.” interior ministry spokesman Tareq Arian told reporters.

Arian’s deputy Hamid Roshan told AFP that an investigat­ion had begun into the explosion.

“I saw many bloodied bodies in dust and smoke, while some of the wounded were screaming in pain,” Reza, who escaped the blast, told AFP, adding that most of the victims were teenage girls who had just left the school.

“I saw a woman checking the bodies and calling for her daughter. She then found her daughter’s blood-stained purse after which she fainted and fell to the ground.”

Health ministry spokesman Dastagir Nazari said several ambulances had been rushed to the site to evacuate the wounded, adding that some in the angry crowd had beaten ambulance workers.

No organisati­on immediatel­y took responsibi­lity for the attack, and the Taliban denied involvemen­t.

But President Ashraf Ghani

blamed the group for the blast, which took place near the entry gate of Sayed alShuhada girls’ school.

“This savage group [Taliban] does not have the power to confront security forces on the battlefiel­d, and instead targets with brutality and barbarism public facilities and the girls’ school,” he said in a statement.

The Taliban has denied carrying out attacks in Kabul since February last year, when they signed a deal with the US that paved the way for peace talks and withdrawal of the remaining US troops.

But the group has clashed in near-daily battles in the rugged countrysid­e with Afghan forces even as the US military reduces its presence.

The US was supposed to have pulled all forces out by May 1 under a deal struck with the Taliban last year, but Washington pushed back the date to September 11 – a move that angered the insurgents.

The top US diplomat in Kabul, Ross Wilson, called the blast “abhorrent”, tweeting: “With scores murdered, this unforgivab­le attack on children is an assault on Afghanista­n´s future, which cannot stand.”

The EU delegation in Afghanista­n condemned what it said was a “despicable act of terrorism”.

“Targeting primarily students in a girls’ school, makes this an attack on the future of Afghanista­n. On young people determined to improve their country,” it said on Twitter.

The UN Assistance Mission in Afghanista­n (UNAMA) expressed its “deep revulsion” at the blast.

And Pakistan’s foreign ministry called the attack “reprehensi­ble” and vowed to support Afghanista­n in its peace efforts.

The Britain-based humanitari­an organisati­on Emergency, which operates a surgical centre in Kabul, said it had received 26 people wounded in the blast.

“We are extremely concerned by this violence in Kabul and other parts of the country in recent weeks, following the announceme­nt of the withdrawal of NATO troops,” it said.

The Dasht-e-Barchi neighbourh­ood has been a regular target of attacks from Sunni Islamist militants.

In May last year, a group of gunmen attacked a hospital in the area in a brazen daylight raid that left 25 people killed, including 16 mothers of newborn babies.

The hospital was supported by the internatio­nal medical charity Doctors Without Borders, which later pulled out of the project.

No group claimed that attack, but Ghani blamed the Taliban and the jihadist Islamic State group.

On October 24, a suicide bomber blew himself up at a tuition centre in the same district, killing 18 people including students in an attack that also went unclaimed.

 ?? AFP ?? Family members and relatives mourn inside a hospital while sitting next to the bodies of victims who died in a blast outside a school in west Kabul.
AFP Family members and relatives mourn inside a hospital while sitting next to the bodies of victims who died in a blast outside a school in west Kabul.

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