Kabul Blast: At least 80 people were killed and more than 300 wounded ,Indian Embassy staff are safe
NEW DELHI/KABUL: A powerful car bomb on Wednesday rocked Kabul’s high-security diplomatic area where the Indian embassy is located but all staffers at the Indian mission were said to be safe. An Afghan health official has raised the death toll from the massive suicide car bombing in Kabul earlier in the day, saying the attack killed 80 people. More than 300 wounded when a massive bomb tore through Kabul’s strongly fortified diplomatic quarter during the morning rush hour, Afghan officials said.
Health Ministry spokesman Waheed Majroh gave the toll, which was confirmed by a second health official and the government media office, as the Interior Ministry urged Kabul residents to donate blood. Witnesses said they saw crowds gathered around ambulances that carried the dead and wounded to hospitals, trying to identify bodies. A huge plume of smoke could be seen spiraling over the area.Reports said the explosion, the latest attack to hit the Afghan capital, shattered windows and blew doors off their hinges in the buildings nearby.
Bodies littered the scene and a towering plume of smoke rose from the area, which houses foreign embassies, after the blast blew out the windows in a number of missions and residences hundreds of metres (yards) from the epicentre. Witnesses described dozens of cars choking the roads as wounded survivors and panicked schoolgirls sought safety, with men and woman struggling to get through security checkpoints to search for loved ones.
It was not immediately clear what the target was, but the attack underscores spiralling insecurity in Afghanistan, where a military beset by soaring casualties and desertions are struggling to beat back the insurgents. Over a third of the country is outside government control.More than an hour after the explosion ambulances were still taking the wounded to hospital, as firefighters struggled to control blazes in several buildings.
Health Ministry spokesman Ismael Kawoosi said around 90 people had been wounded in the blast, as well as the nine killed, but he cautioned the toll could rise.“They are still bringing bodies and wounded people to hospitals,” he told AFP.There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but the attack came as the resurgent Taliban are stepping up their annual “spring offensive.”
The Islamic State (IS) group has also claimed responsibility for several recent bombings in the Afghan capital, including a powerful blast targeting an armoured NATO convoy that killed at least eight people and wounded 28 on May 3.Najib Danish, an Interior Ministry spokesman, said initial findings showed it had been a truck bomb.
Manpreet Vohra, India’s envoy to Afghanistan, told the Times Now television channel the blast hit around 100 metres as the crow flies from India’s embassy, one of several in the area.“We are all safe, all our staff, all our personnel are safe. However, the blast was very large and nearby buildings including our own building have considerable damage in terms of broken glass and shattered windows and blown doors etc,” he said.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted, “We strongly condemn the terrorist blast in Kabul. Our thoughts are with the families of the deceased & prayers with the injured.”Official sources at the Ministry of External Affairs in New Delhi said that all staff at the Indian embassy were safe. “By God’s grace, Indian Embassy staff are safe in the massive Kabul blast,” tweeted Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swaraj.
The explosion also shattered windows at the Japanese embassy. “Two Japanese embassy staffers were mildly injured, suffering cuts”, a foreign ministry official in Tokyo told AFP. Pentagon chief Jim Mattis has warned of “another tough year” for both foreign troops and local forces in Afghanistan.
Afghan troops are backed by U.S. and NATO forces, and the Pentagon has reportedly asked the White House to send thousands more troops to the country to break the deadlocked fight against the Taliban. U.S. troops in Afghanistan number about 8,400 today, and there are another 5,000 from NATO allies, who also mainly serve in an advisory capacity — a far cry from the U.S. presence of more than 100,000 six years ago.
The blast was the latest in a long line of attacks in Kabul. The province surrounding the capital had the highest number of casualties in the first three months of 2017 thanks to multiple attacks in the city, with civilians bearing the brunt of the violence.(With Agency inputs)