Vancouver Sun

THE DEATH TOLL FROM A BOMB ATTACK OUTSIDE A SCHOOL IN THE AFGHAN CAPITAL KABUL ROSE TO 68 ON SUNDAY, WITH DOCTORS STRUGGLING TO AID THE INJURED AND FAMILIES SEARCHING DESPERATEL­Y FOR MISSING CHILDREN.

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• The death toll from a bomb attack outside a school in the Afghan capital, Kabul, had risen to 68 by Sunday, officials said, with doctors struggling to care for 165 injured victims and families searching desperatel­y for missing children.

Explosions on Saturday evening shook the neighbourh­ood of Dashte-Barchi, home to a large community of Shi'ites from the Hazara ethnic minority which has been targeted in the past by ISIL.

A car bomb was detonated in front of the Sayed Al-Shuhada school and two more bombs exploded when students rushed out in panic.

Officials said most of those killed were schoolgirl­s. Some families were still searching hospitals for their children.

“The first blast was powerful and happened so close to the children that some of them could not be found,” said an Afghan official, requesting anonymity.

An eyewitness told Reuters all but seven or eight of the victims were schoolgirl­s going home after finishing their studies. On Sunday, civilians and policemen collected books and school bags strewn across a bloodstain­ed road now busy with shoppers ahead of celebratio­ns for Eid al-Fitr next week.

President Ashraf Ghani on Saturday blamed Taliban insurgents but a spokesman for the group denied involvemen­t and condemned any attacks on Afghan civilians.

Pope Francis called the attack an “inhuman act” in remarks to pilgrims in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on Sunday.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres also condemned the attack and expressed his deepest sympathies to the victims' families and to the Afghan government and people.

Families of the victims blamed the government and Western powers for failing to put an end to violence and the ongoing war.

Bodies were still being collected from morgues as the first burials were conducted in the west of the city. Some families were still searching for missing relatives on Sunday, gathering outside hospitals to read names posted on the walls, and checking morgues.

“The entire night we carried bodies of young girls and boys to a graveyard and prayed for everyone wounded in the attack,” said Mohammed Reza Ali, who has been helping families of the victims at a private hospital.

“Why not just kill all of us to put an end to this war?” he said.

Security was intensifie­d across Kabul after the attack but authoritie­s said they would not be able to provide security to all schools, mosques and other public places.

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