A well-known imam and a worshipper were killed in a prayer-time bombing at a popular mosque in Kabul’s fortified Green Zone on Tuesday, officials said.
The latest attack in the Afghan capital came after seven civilians were killed in the north of the country late Monday in a roadside bomb blast authorities blamed on the Taliban.
No group immediately claimed the mosque explosion, which was denounced by a Taliban spokesman on Twitter.
The loud blast, which occurred at one of the city’s most famous places of worship, sent shockwaves through the sprawling militarised zone, where alarms sounded at embassies and international offices, sending staff rushing into safe rooms.
“Unfortunately, this evening some explosives placed by terrorists in Wazir Akbar Khan mosque detonated,” interior ministry spokesman Tareq Arian told AFP.
The mosque is located in central Kabul at the main entrance to the Green Zone and is accessible from both inside and outside the tightly controlled area. Top leaders often go there to offer ceremonial prayers.
The mosque’s imam, Ayaz Niazi, was among those killed, Arian said. He was famous in Kabul and his politically charged sermons were often so well attended that worshippers would spill into the grounds outside the mosque.
Arian initially said the attack was conducted by a suicide bomber. But as investigations proceeded, it was not clear that remained the case.
At least two additional people were wounded, according to a previous report.
President Ashraf Ghani’s spokesman called the incident a “heinous” attack.
The attack follows a Saturday bombing claimed by the Islamic State group against a television station’s minibus in central Kabul, killing a journalist and the driver.
It also comes after officials said seven civilians were killed Monday by a roadside bomb linked to the Taliban in northern Afghanistan, even as authorities pressed for peace talks with the militants.
The blast struck a small truck in Kunduz province carrying a group of labourers in the volatile Khan Abad district.
No group claimed responsibility, but Kunduz provincial spokesman Esmatullah Muradi blamed the Taliban.
“The Taliban usually plant roadside bombs to target security forces, but their bombs usually kill civilians,” he told AFP.
Two of six others wounded in the Kunduz blast were in critical condition, district chief Hayatullah Amiri said.
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