Explosion kills eight Afghans as they call for peace

AFP  |  Kabul 

A bomb killed eight people at a small gathering calling for peace in the Afghan province of today, officials said, underscoring the suffering of civilians amid growing calls for an end to the conflict.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blast in the volatile province south of the capital Kabul, but officials said the bomb was detonated as a crowd of war-weary locals had gathered in the district of to demand peace.

"Eight people, all of them civilians, were killed. Four more injured. They had gathered in support of peace," district Mohammad Hanif Hanafi, told AFP.

Shamshad Laraway, a for the provincial governor, confirmed the account, and said the authorities were investigating the nature of the blast.

Calls for peace have gathered steam in the war-ravaged country after the agreed to a three-day ceasefire during the Muslim festival of Eid early this month.

The ceasefire, the first in the nearly 17 years since the US invasion toppled the regime, saw unprecedented scenes of fighters and security forces hugging and taking selfies together around the country.

The insurgents returned to the battlefield last week after refusing a government request to extend their ceasefire over Eid, though calls for peace by the Afghan public have been growing. Earlier this month dozens of activists from southern province arrived in after marching hundreds of miles on foot to call for an end to the violence.

Yesterday, another 25-member group of Afghans arrived in from the remote north-eastern province, while earlier in the week, some 15 protesters reached the capital after trekking all the way from the border with to join the calls for an end to the bloody conflict.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, June 28 2018. 19:00 IST