Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Afghan blast kills 4 people in Taliban center

-

KABUL, Afghanista­n — A suicide bomber struck at a center of Taliban power Wednesday, setting off a blast at a government ministry in the Afghan capital of Kabul and killing at least four people.

The explosion went off in the afternoon as workers and visitors were praying inside a mosque of Afghanista­n’s Interior Ministry, which is responsibl­e for security and law enforcemen­t in the country. At least 25 worshipper­s were injured, a Taliban official said.

The attack inside a fortified compound dealt a serious blow to the Taliban, who have been trying to project control and strength since they seized power in August 2021.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity, but the extremist group Islamic State, the main Taliban rival, has carried out a series of attacks, including in mosques, as part of a long-running insurgency.

Targets have included Taliban patrols and members of Afghanista­n’s Shiite minority.

Wednesday’s attack took place around 1:30 p.m. at the Interior Ministry compound on a main road next to Kabul’s internatio­nal airport.

Abdul Nafi Takor, a ministry spokesman, said the blast went off during prayers. He said four worshipper­s were killed and 25 wounded.

The Emergency Hospital in Kabul said it began receiving patients around 2 p.m. with injuries and burns. Some of those wounded “reported seeing a man detonate a device,” said the hospital’s acting country director, Dejan Panic. “It was a suicide attack.”

The mosque blast follows last week’s suicide bombing at an education center in Kabul that killed as many as 52 people, according to a tally compiled by The Associated Press, more than twice the death toll acknowledg­ed by Taliban officials.

Earlier this year, United Nations experts said the main military threat to the Taliban came from Islamic State and guerrilla-style attacks by former Afghan government security personnel.

Their report said the presence of Islamic State, the al-Qaida network and “many other terrorist groups and fighters on Afghan soil” was raising concerns in neighborin­g countries and the wider internatio­nal community.

In 2020, the Islamic State affiliate attacked a Kabul maternity hospital that killed 24 people, including newborn babies and mothers.

In 2021, before the Taliban takeover, the group attacked a school, killing more than 90, most of them schoolgirl­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States