China Daily (Hong Kong)

Seven dead as explosions rock funeral amid tensions and bloodshed in Kabul

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KABUL — Explosions ripped through the funeral of an Afghan anti-government protester in Kabul on Saturday, killing at least seven people and wounding dozens in fresh carnage that spiked tensions in a city already on edge.

The latest killings, which could provoke a new cycle of bloodshed, bring to 101 the number of people killed this week with hundreds injured in one of the worst bouts of violence in the Afghan capital for years.

Witnesses reported three back-to-back blasts during the burial of Salim Ezadyar, who was among four people killed on Friday when a protest over spiraling insecurity in Kabul degenerate­d into street clashes with police.

“So far seven dead bodies and 119 wounded people have been brought to Kabul hospitals,” health ministry spokesman Waheed Majroh said.

The funeral of Ezadyar, the son of an influentia­l Afghan senator, was attended by sen- people ior government figures including Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah and Foreign Minister Salahuddin Rabbani, but they escaped unharmed.

No group has so far claimed the attack, with the Taliban — the biggest insurgent group in Afghanista­n — denying any involvemen­t.

The fresh killings are likely to further polarize a city that has been on edge since a truck bombing on Wednesday in Kabul’s diplomatic quarter killed 90 people and wounded hundreds, in the deadliest attack on the Afghan capital since 2001.

President Ashraf Ghani made a televised appeal for national unity after the funer- al bombings. “The country is under attack,” he said. “We must stay strong and united.”

Wednesday’s assault highlighte­d the ability of militants to strike even in the capital’s most secure district, home to the presidenti­al palace and foreign embassies that are enveloped in a maze of concrete blast walls. The government has blamed the Talibanall­ied Haqqani network for the attack.

On Friday, the district center again became a battlefiel­d when hundreds of demonstrat­ors incensed by the bombing clashed with police, prompting officials to beat them back with live rounds in the air, tear gas and water cannon.

The tense week of violence during the holy fasting month of Ramadan has left hospitals in the city overwhelme­d, with many running beyond capacity to treat the injured.

Police on Saturday locked down much of Kabul city, with armed checkpoint­s and armored vehicles patrolling the streets to prevent a repeat of Friday’s clashes.

The United Nations and a host of internatio­nal allies have urged restraint by all sides.

“The attack today, conducted by those opportunis­tically seeking to use these very fragile moments to destabiliz­e Afghanista­n, follows so much violence this week,” the UN said in a statement.

“In the context of so much suffering, now is the time to seek unity and solidarity.”

have been killed in Kabul this week in one of the worst bouts of violence in the Afghan capital in recent years.

 ?? WANG HUAN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? Visitors gather to take pictures of models of Beijing’s Bird’s Nest Stadium and the Water Cube at a sand sculpture contest in Garr Weiss, Texas, US, on Saturday. Nearly 60 teams took part in the competitio­n, which attracted more than 250,000 spectators.
WANG HUAN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE Visitors gather to take pictures of models of Beijing’s Bird’s Nest Stadium and the Water Cube at a sand sculpture contest in Garr Weiss, Texas, US, on Saturday. Nearly 60 teams took part in the competitio­n, which attracted more than 250,000 spectators.

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