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A Taliban fighter stands guard as people wait to receive food rations distributed by a Chinese humanitarian aid group, during the holy month of Ramadan, in Kabul, Afghanistan on Saturday. Photo: AP

Islamic State claims responsibility for bombing in Kabul on eve of Eid al-Fitr holiday

  • Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack on Saturday, which comes a day after an explosion killed more than 50 worshippers in Kabul
  • Security concerns have risen across Afghanistan as it prepares to mark Eid al-Fitr on Sunday under Taliban rule for the first time in more than 20 years
Afghanistan

A bomb blast in a passenger van in Kabul on Saturday killed at least one person, officials said, in the second explosion in the Afghan capital in two days, as security concerns rise on the eve of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr.

Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack on Saturday, according to the group’s Telegram channel.

“One woman was killed and three more injured,” Khalid Zadran, a spokesman for Kabul’s Commander, told Reuters.

A day earlier, an explosion killed more than 50 worshippers after Friday prayers at a Kabul mosque amid a spate of mosque attacks during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

‘I thought my eardrums were cracked’: Kabul mosque blast kills 50

One witness to the passenger van blast, Ali Maisam, 19, who was waiting outside a nearby bakery at the time, said he saw a number of bodies.

“I saw people coming out of the minibus with bloody and burnt faces … I saw that four bodies were taken out and a woman was among the dead,” he said.

Security concerns have risen across Afghanistan as the country prepares to mark Eid al-Fitr on Sunday under Taliban rule for the first time in more than 20 years, after the group was removed from power following a US invasion in 2001.

People who were injured leave the scene of the bomb blast in Kabul, Afghanistan on Friday. Photo: EPA-EFE

The Taliban retook power last August after foreign forces pulled out of the country and since then Afghanistan has been grappling with a rise in attacks by Islamic State.

Taliban authorities announced on Saturday that Eid would be marked the following day, leading to raucous rounds of celebratory gunfire in the streets of Kabul late on Saturday night.

The authorities also moved to assuage people’s fears over security ahead of Eid.

“We ensure our countrymen we will ensure security during Eid,” spokesman for Afghan interior ministry Abdul Nafee Takor said.

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