advertisement
An explosion struck near an anti-Taliban rally in the Afghan capital on Monday, 12 November, killing at least four people, officials said.
Authorities said that at least 20 Afghan security personnel had been killed over the past 24 hours in the eastern Ghazni province.
It was not immediately clear if the blast in Kabul was from a bomb that was detonated by remote control or from a suicide bomber. The explosion took place about 500 metres (yards) from where hundreds of minority Shias had gathered to denounce the latest Taliban attacks in Ghazni districts of Jaghuri and Malistan.
Najib Danish, the Interior Ministry's spokesperson, confirmed the explosion but could not immediately provide more details. Wahid Mujroh, spokesperson for the Health Ministry, said so far at least three were confirmed dead while eight wounded people were brought to the hospital.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the explosion.
Both resurgent Taliban, which now controls nearly half of Afghanistan and stages near-daily attacks on Afghan forces, and the Islamic State group's affiliate in the region have been behind many recent Kabul attacks and bombings.
Meanwhile, Afghan lawmaker Ali Akbar Qasemi said fighting since Sunday, 11 October, in Ghazni has focused on the district of Jaghuri where 20 policemen were killed.
The Afghan army chief, Gen. Mohammad Sharif Yaftali, told reporters that government forces have sustained casualties in the battles but declined to elaborate on specifics or say how many were killed.
There was no immediate response from authorities on the Malistan claim.
Ghazni is the only one out of 34 Afghan provinces where the country's October parliamentary elections could not take place for security reasons. Voting there has been postponed for a year.
In August, the Taliban overran parts of the provincial capital, also called Ghazni. At the time, hundreds of people fled the city amid intense fighting between Afghan forces and insurgents that killed about 120 members of the security forces and civilians. According to Afghan authorities, nearly 200 insurgents, many of them foreign fighters, were also killed.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)