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Suicide bomber strikes Kabul's Shiite area, casualties reported 40 dead, dozens wounded in multiple Kabul blasts At least 6 dead in 12-hour Taliban siege at luxury Kabul hotel At least 40 dead in multiple Kabul blasts: interior ministry At least 23 killed in multiple attacks in Afghanistan -
Officials said the attacker was on foot. Afghan officials gave a wide range of figures for the number of casualties: a security source told AFP 13 people were killed and more than 30 wounded. But Kabul police chief Mohammad Daud Amin told Tolo News that five people were killed and 22 others wounded. Amin said the bomber detonated his explosive device at a checkpoint "after being identified by police". "The bomber failed to get inside to target the gathering," he said. Kazim Ali, who was at the gathering, told AFP the force of the explosion shattered the windows of the mosque. "We were inside the mosque when a loud explosion took place. Security forces didn't allow us to move afterwards," he said. Afghan President Ashraf Ghani at an international conference in Kabul last week unveiled a plan to open talks with the Taliban, including eventually recognising them as a political party. In return, Ghani said the militants should officially recognise the Afghan government and constitution, a perennial sticking point in past attempts at dialogue. "The offer of negotiation is on the table," UN envoy to Afghanistan Tadamichi Yamamoto told a Security Council meeting on Thursday to mark the annual renewal of the UN mission to the war-torn country. The United States has also called on the insurgents to consider the offer of peace talks. While Western officials have hailed Ghani's offer as a positive step, they have told AFP that it is far too early to tell if it will lead anywhere. Before Ghani's speech, the militants had called for direct talks with the US. Friday's attack comes a week after a car bomb detonated near a passing Australian embassy convoy in the city's east that killed at least one child and wounded several other people. Kabul is one of the deadliest places in Afghanistan for civilians as both the Taliban and the expanding IS group step up their assaults on the city. Despite the cautious optimism for a peace deal, Kabul remains on high alert, fearing further violence. American officials are also braced for more fighting in the spring after an unusually violent winter when the conflict traditionally eases. Since mid-January, militants have stormed a luxury hotel, bombed a crowded street, raided a military compound and launched a suicide attack during morning rush hour in the capital, killing more than 130 people. In a separate incident overnight, Taliban militants raided a number of checkpoints manned by Afghan security forces in the northern province of Takhar, Khwaja Ghar district governor Mohammad Omar told AFP. Omar said 10 local police and seven soldiers were killed and more than a dozen wounded in the attacks claimed by the Taliban. The casualty figures could not be immediately verified.
(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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