Millennium Post

32 KILLED IN AFGHAN SUICIDE ATTACK

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JALALABAD: A suicide attack on protesters in eastern Afghanista­n on Tuesday killed at least 32 people, officials said, as an uptick in violence across the country dampens hopes for peace talks and elections. The toll is feared to rise further.

Another 57 people were wounded in the blast in Nangarhar province, where demonstrat­ors had blocked a highway in protest over the appointmen­t of a local police chief, provincial governor spokesman Ataullah Khogyani said.

Provincial health department spokesman Inamullah Miakhil confirmed the number of dead and wounded.

"Dozens of wounded people have been brought to Jalalabad hospitals so far," Miakhil added.

The attack came hours after a double bombing in front of a girls' school in the provincial capital Jalalabad, which killed a boy and wounded four others.

The first explosion happened in front of Malika Omaira girls' school at around 8:30 am (0400 GMT), Khogyani said earlier.

A second bomb went off as students from a neighbouri­ng boys' school and locals gathered at the scene, he added.

There has been no claim of responsibi­lity for any of the attacks, but the Taliban and the Islamic State (IS) group are active in Nangarhar, which borders Pakistan.

A wave of violence across Afghanista­n in recent weeks has claimed the lives of hundreds of civilians and security forces, as the Taliban makes gains on the battlefiel­d and IS launches deadly urban attacks.

The fighting has tempered optimism that had been tentativel­y growing as Afghan and internatio­nal players ratchet up efforts to convince the Taliban to negotiate an end to the 17-year conflict.

An unpreceden­ted ceasefire in June followed by talks between US officials and

Taliban representa­tives in Qatar in July raised hopes that peace negotiatio­ns could bring an end to the fighting.

There has been speculatio­n the two sides will meet again this month. The Taliban have long insisted on direct talks with Washington and refused to negotiate with the Afghan government, which they see as illegitima­te.

But newly appointed US envoy Zalmay Khalilzad has cancelled further talks with the militants until he has reviewed the American strategy, a Western official in Kabul said on the condition of anonymity.

The informatio­n could not be immediatel­y confirmed. One militant source, a senior Taliban commander based in neighbouri­ng Pakistan, had said he expected more talks to be held "soon".

The intensifie­d fighting has also fuelled speculatio­n over whether Afghanista­n's longdelaye­d parliament­ary elections will go ahead on October 20.

The country's already overstretc­hed security forces will be tasked with protecting thousands of polling stations around the country at a time when they are already struggling to beat back insurgents.

Delivering ballot papers and monitoring the vote, which is seen as a test run for next year's presidenti­al election, will be challengin­g, officials have warned.

In the past two days Taliban fighters killed nearly 60 members of the security forces in a spate of attacks in the country's north and threatened a provincial capital for the second time in as many months.

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