A string of bombs exploded near a Shiite shrine and cemetery in the Afghan capital on Thursday as people gathered to mark Nowruz, the Persian new year, leaving six people dead and as many as 20 wounded, Afghan officials said.
The police’s initial investigation indicated that three explosive devices had been remotely detonated, according to Interior Ministry spokesman Nasrat Rahimi.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bombing, but a local Islamic State affiliate has repeatedly targeted the country’s minority Shiite Muslims. The Sunni militant group considers Shiite Muslims to be apostates deserving of death.
Kabul’s Emergency Services director Mohammad Asim said two children were among the wounded in the blasts. The extent of their injuries was not immediately known.
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani condemned the attack, calling it a “direct assault on our traditional and cultural values.”
Shiite worshippers had gathered at the Karti Sakhi shrine in a mainly Shiite neighborhood of Kabul when the blasts rang out. The tradition at the shrine is to hoist green flags and honor the dead at the cemetery by placing food at the gravesides.
A Shiite cleric, Mir Hussain Shah Naseri, said he had planned to go to the shrine with his children to visit the grave of his wife, who died seven months ago, but because of the attack he stayed home. Nowruz, usually a festive occasion, was a somber following the explosions, he said.
Wary Afghans had been warned by authorities of violence ahead of the Nowruz celebrations. The holiday, dating back to at least 1700 B.C. and incorporating ancient Zoroastrian traditions, is the most important event in the Iranian calendar and is widely celebrated across the territories of the old Persian empire, from the Middle East to Central Asia.
Kabul police spokesman Basir Mujahid said a fourth explosive was defused near Kabul University, and that authorities were searching for any others that may have been placed in the area.
But he added that the explosives were far from the main site of the celebrations.
Exactly one year ago, a blast near a crowd celebrating at the shrine killed 33 people in an attack claimed by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL or ISIS) group.
ISIL, which regularly targets Shia communities in Sunni-majority Afghanistan has also attacked the shrine once before, in October 2016, when its gunmen killed 18 people gathered there to mark Ashoura, a particularly important period of mourning for Shia Muslims, as it marks the anniversary of the 7th century Battle of Karbala in present-day Iraq, when Imam Hussein, grandson of Prophet Muhammad, was killed.
But he added that the explosives were far from the main site of the celebrations.
Exactly one year ago, a blast near a crowd celebrating at the shrine killed 33 people in an attack claimed by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL or ISIS) group.
ISIL, which regularly targets Shia communities in Sunni-majority Afghanistan has also attacked the shrine once before, in October 2016, when its gunmen killed 18 people gathered there to mark Ashoura, a particularly important period of mourning for Shia Muslims, as it marks the anniversary of the 7th century Battle of Karbala in present-day Iraq, when Imam Hussein, grandson of Prophet Muhammad, was killed.
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