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Scores Killed in Car Bombing at Busy Market in Eastern Afghanistan | |
(about 4 hours later) | |
KABUL, Afghanistan — A sport utility vehicle packed with explosives detonated in a market in eastern Afghanistan on Tuesday, bringing down shops and leaving the bloodied remains of men, women and children in the rubble. By late afternoon, at least 89 people were known to have been killed, the Defense Ministry said. | KABUL, Afghanistan — A sport utility vehicle packed with explosives detonated in a market in eastern Afghanistan on Tuesday, bringing down shops and leaving the bloodied remains of men, women and children in the rubble. By late afternoon, at least 89 people were known to have been killed, the Defense Ministry said. |
The bombing, in Paktika Province, was one of the deadliest terrorist attacks in Afghanistan since 2001, and suspicion immediately fell on the Taliban or their Islamist militant allies. But the insurgents denied any involvement. The market was filled mainly with civilians and had little strategic value to either side in the war here. | |
Afghan officials said the attack occurred in the Urgun District of Paktika, near a religious school in the bazaar. | Afghan officials said the attack occurred in the Urgun District of Paktika, near a religious school in the bazaar. |
The explosion devastated more than just the immediate surroundings. The Defense Ministry said the bomb went off at 10:30 a.m., one of the busiest times of the day for shopping during Ramadan, the holy month when observant Muslims fast from dawn to sunset. The blast reverberated through the narrow lanes of the bazaar, knocking down tightly packed mud-and-wood structures that housed all kinds of shops, whether auto repair garages or vegetable stands. | |
“There was blood everywhere, and we could see hundreds of people shouting and crying, including women and children,” said Sharafuddin, 21, who owns a shop that sells kitchenware. “I saw a woman dead while her two kids were crying sitting next to her, and they were covered in blood,” he said in a telephone interview. “The entire area seems like a graveyard with fresh blood on it.” | |
In the aftermath of the explosion, Afghan soldiers helped sift through rubble while medics and ambulances evacuated the wounded, said Maj. Gen. Zahir Azimi, the spokesman for the Defense Ministry. Clinics around the area reported being flooded with casualties. | |
The district where the attack took place is in a mountainous and remote area near the border with Pakistan. But the Taliban have tended to direct their biggest bombings toward major cities like Kabul, where an attack on a restaurant killed 21 people in January 2014, and a bombing at a Shiite shrine killed at least 63 people in December 2011. | The district where the attack took place is in a mountainous and remote area near the border with Pakistan. But the Taliban have tended to direct their biggest bombings toward major cities like Kabul, where an attack on a restaurant killed 21 people in January 2014, and a bombing at a Shiite shrine killed at least 63 people in December 2011. |
Some officials and witnesses said the vehicle had been moving when its explosives were detonated, suggesting that it might have been on its way to a different target when it exploded. Residents said the market struck Tuesday was not an obvious target for the insurgents — there are no government offices or significant police or army bases there, and forces from the American-led coalition have little presence anywhere in Paktika Province. | |
Though the bombing was one of the deadliest single episodes of the war, NATO airstrikes have been responsible for higher death tolls. The worst on record, involving American strikes on the village of Granai in May 2009, killed 97 to 147 people, according to Afghan accounts. American officials disputed Afghan reports that most or even all were civilians, saying that the strike had killed dozens of militants. But stricter limits on airstrikes were imposed later. | |
But Taliban attacks still account for the vast majority of total civilian deaths each year in Afghanistan, according to the United Nations. Most of those killed are people riding vehicles that strike roadside bombs hidden by the insurgents, or are bystanders caught in Taliban attacks and the gun battles with security forces that ordinarily follow. | But Taliban attacks still account for the vast majority of total civilian deaths each year in Afghanistan, according to the United Nations. Most of those killed are people riding vehicles that strike roadside bombs hidden by the insurgents, or are bystanders caught in Taliban attacks and the gun battles with security forces that ordinarily follow. |
The Taliban insist they do their best to avoid civilian casualties, aware that if they are to achieve their aim of again ruling Afghanistan, they are likely to need at least some popular support. But that has not stopped them from regularly executing attacks in crowded parts of major cities where it would be hard to imagine not killing innocents. | The Taliban insist they do their best to avoid civilian casualties, aware that if they are to achieve their aim of again ruling Afghanistan, they are likely to need at least some popular support. But that has not stopped them from regularly executing attacks in crowded parts of major cities where it would be hard to imagine not killing innocents. |
On Tuesday, the Taliban simply blamed “the enemy” for the attack in Paktika, saying it was an attempt to smear the insurgents. The Taliban did not specify who the enemy being blamed might be. | On Tuesday, the Taliban simply blamed “the enemy” for the attack in Paktika, saying it was an attempt to smear the insurgents. The Taliban did not specify who the enemy being blamed might be. |