Publish dateWednesday 21 November 2018 - 06:51
Story Code : 174426
Afghan suicide bomber kills 50, injures 72
50 people, mainly religious scholars, have been killed in the Afghan capital and another 72 wounded when a suicide bomber blew himself up.
AVA- suicide bomber has blown himself up in a banqueting hall where Islamic religious scholars had gathered in the Afghan capital Kabul, killing 50 people, government officials say.
Najib Danish, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, said 72 other people had been injured in Tuesday's blast.
"A suicide bomber detonated his explosives inside a wedding hall where Islamic religious scholars had gathered to commemorate the anniversary of the Prophet Mohammad's birth," Danish said.
The banquet room is in the Uranus wedding hall, a complex housing several large reception rooms near Kabul airport.
"Hundreds of Islamic scholars and their followers had gathered to recite verses from the holy Quran to observe the Eid Milad-un-Nabi festival at the private banquet hall," said a spokesman for Kabul police.
Officials at Kabul's Emergency Hospital said 30 ambulances had rushed to the scene and over 40 people were critically wounded.
Both the Sunni Taliban militant group and a local Islamic State affiliate have in the past attacked religious scholars aligned with the government -- who have decreed that suicide attacks are forbidden by Islam.
But the Taliban said in a statement that "our men were not involved in the Kabul blast and we condemn the loss of human lives".
The radical Sunni militant group ISIS has mostly focused its major attacks on Afghan soil on Shi'ite Muslim sites of worship, regarding Shi'ites as heretics.
President Ashraf Ghani called Tuesday's attack "un-Islamic" and "unforgivable". He declared Wednesday a day of mourning.
Afghan security forces have struggled to prevent attacks by Islamist militants since most NATO combat troops withdrew in 2014.
Despite diplomatic efforts to end the 17-year war, in recent months the security situation has deteriorated sharply.
The Kabul government now controls only 56 per cent of Afghan territory, down from 72 per cent in 2015, according to a US government report issued this month.
 
 
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