San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Dozens feared dead when Afghan wedding is bombed

- By Mujib Mashal

KABUL, Afghanista­n — An explosion ripped through a packed wedding hall in Kabul late Saturday evening, and dozens were feared dead.

Nasrat Rahimi, a spokesman for Afghanista­n’s Interior Ministry, confirmed the explosion but could not provide numbers on casualties. He said the blast, which local news media reports said was probably caused by a suicide bomber, had occurred near the stage in the wedding hall.

One official said at least 40 people had been killed and more than 100 wounded, but the Interior Ministry said it would not be able to release an official toll until Sunday.

“There are so many dead and wounded,” Ahmad Omid, a survivor who said about 1,200 guests had been invited to the wedding for his father’s cousin, said. “I was with the groom in the other room when we heard the blast and then I couldn’t find anyone. Everyone was lying all around the hall.”

Photos from inside the hall showed wrecked tables and bodies strewn all over. Videos by witnesses showed panic outside as wailing family members looked for their loved ones.

“It was a sudden explosion inside; all my brothers, I can’t find any of them,” one young man, covered in blood, says in a video circulatin­g on social media.

“The explosion was huge,” said Muhibullah Zeer, a Health Ministry official who was at the nearby Istiqlal hospital. “We are busy with collecting the data and shifting the wounded to hospitals. We don’t know how many were killed and how many were wounded.”

The Dubai City Wedding Hall is in the western section of the Afghan capital, a neighborho­od inhabited by ethnic Hazaras, who are largely Shiite. Kabul’s huge, brightly lit wedding halls are centers of community life in a city weary of decades of war, with thousands of dollars spent on a single evening.

The neighborho­od has seen repeated suicide bombings in the past couple of years targeting soft targets with minimal security, like mosques and education centers. Most of those previous attacks targeting Shiites have been claimed by the Islamic State, a Sunni extremist group that has kept a small but stubborn foothold in the country over the past few years.

The attack comes despite high security across Kabul, with preparatio­ns underway for the country’s celebratio­n of the 100th anniversar­y of repelling an invasion by the British.

The attack also comes as the United States is nearing a deal with the Taliban, still responsibl­e for the bulk of the insurgent violence, that could represent the beginning of an end to the 18-year U.S. presence in the country.

 ?? Nishanuddi­n Khan / Associated Press ?? A man is taken to a hospital after an explosion at a wedding hall Saturday in Kabul, Afghanista­n. The blast was reportedly caused by a suicide bomber.
Nishanuddi­n Khan / Associated Press A man is taken to a hospital after an explosion at a wedding hall Saturday in Kabul, Afghanista­n. The blast was reportedly caused by a suicide bomber.

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