The Borneo Post

Death toll from shooting in Kabul surges to over 30

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KABUL: The death toll from Friday’s attack in the Afghan capital Kabul surged to over 30 as terrorist group Daesh claimed responsibi­lity for the bloodbath, according to an official quoted by Anadolu Agency.

Desperatio­n and resentment gripped the capital’s western Dasht- e-Barchi neighbourh­ood a day after the anniversar­y of the death of a local Shiite leader was sprayed with bullets, sowing death and shockwaves of horror.

The country’s Interior Ministry on Saturday revised the death toll to 32, with over 60 civilian victims with bullet wounds fighting for life at various public hospitals.

Ministry spokesman Nusrat Rahimi told Anadolu Agency that two attackers used a building under constructi­on to launch the attack before they were killed in a shootout.

Survivors of the attack include Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah, High Peace Council Chair Abdul Karim Khalili, and former Foreign Minister Salahuddin Rabbani.

On social media, Daesh terrorists group took responsibi­lity for the attack, saying two of its militants had carried it out.

The Taliban had denied any involvemen­t in the immediate wake of the assault, which Afghan President Mohammed Ashraf Ghani called an “inhumane attack against the national unity.”

In a phone conversati­on, the leader inquired about the well-being of his bitter electoral rival Abdullah.

The attack came after the US and Taliban reached a landmark peace deal aimed at ending violence in the wartorn country.

In 2019, a ceremony marking the anniversar­y of the death of Abdul Ali Mazari – the slain leader of the country’s Shia Hazara community allegedly killed by the Taliban in 1995 – was also attacked in similar fashion, leaving 11 people killed.

Daesh claimed that attack as well.

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