Afghan election candidate among four killed in bomb attack

AFP  |  Kandahar (Afghanistan) 

A bomb placed under a sofa killed four Afghans including an candidate on Wednesday, officials said, as deadly violence escalates ahead of the October 20 parliamentary ballot.

had been meeting with supporters in his campaign office in the southern province of - a stronghold - when a bomb hidden under a sofa exploded, told AFP.

Qahraman was among four people killed by the blast in the provincial capital Lashkar Gah, told reporters. Another seven were wounded and three suspects have been arrested, he added.

condemned the attack on Qahraman, who he had sent to in 2016 as an to help defeat the Qahraman later resigned.

In other poll-related violence, gunmen ambushed a candidate's convoy in province, near Kabul, on Wednesday, said.

And later an improvised blew up near the campaign rally of another candidate in the provincial capital Pule Alam, Laraway said. There were no casualties in either attack.

campaigning for the ballot ends at midnight Wednesday. Most of the 10 candidates who have died in the lead-up to the were murdered in targeted killings.

Qahraman was the second candidate killed in Lashkar Gah this month, after was among eight people killed in a suicide attack last week.

That incident came a day after the Taliban warned candidates to withdraw from the parliamentary election, which the group has vowed to attack.

The Taliban issued a fresh warning Wednesday calling on "educational workers" to stop schools being turned into polling centres and prevent teachers and students from participating as workers.

Violence has increased ahead of the long-delayed vote, with hundreds of people killed or wounded in poll-related attacks across the country.

Preparations for the ballot have been in shambles and with days to go, organisers are still struggling to distribute voting materials to more than 5,000 polling centres.

The election for parliament's lower house is seen as a dry run for the scheduled for April and organisers have said it would not be delayed any further.

It also is seen as a key milestone ahead of a UN meeting in in November, where will be under pressure to show progress on "democratic processes".

Almost nine million people have registered to vote, but observers expect far fewer to turn out due to the threat of militant attacks and expectations of widespread fraud.

More than 50,000 members of Afghanistan's already overstretched security forces are being deployed to protect polling centres on election day.

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

First Published: Wed, October 17 2018. 15:15 IST