Dozens Killed, Injured in Attacks During Holy Holiday in Afghanistan
Blasts in Afghanistan kill more than 50 - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
http://kabc.com/rssItem.asp?feedid=113&itemid=29764808UPDATE: The Taliban has issued a statement denying any kind of involvement in Tuesday's attacks in Kabul and Mazar-e-Sharif.
(KABUL, Afghanistan) -- For the first time, militants targeted Shiite mourners in Afghanistan on one of their holiest holidays Tuesday, setting off bombs in downtown Kabul and the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif, according to police officials.
In the most significant attack, at least 54 people were killed and 164 injured, according to the Afghan health ministry, when a suicide bomber blew himself up in the Abul Fazel Shrine in the middle of Kabul, not far from the ministry of defense and the presidential palace. Reporters at the shrine described a horrific scene, with bodies of the dead and injured strewn across the entry of the shrine and the street outside.
Almost simultaneously, a bomb hidden in a bicycle exploded by a Shiite shrine in Mazar-e-Sharif, the largest city in northern Afghanistan, near the border with Uzbekistan. Four were killed and 21 others were injured in that attack, according to police.
Tuesday is Ashurra, a national holiday in many Muslim countries that marks the death of the prophet’s grandson Hussein -- an event that helped cement the separation of Shia and Sunni Islam. Shiites mark the day by mourning, often beating or cutting themselves to reenact the pain that Hussein suffered.
There has been horrible violence on Ashurra in Iraq over the years -- as well as in Pakistan -- but never in Afghanistan, which is why Tuesday's attack is troubling. The Afghan Taliban is an almost entirely Sunni group, but there has not been major sectarian violence in Afghanistan since the initial U.S. invasion in 2001. The worry is that this will set off more sectarian attacks and instability in Kabul and Mazar-e-Sharif.
Blasts in Afghanistan kill more than 50 - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)