Victims of Gardez mosque attack laid to rest

Hundreds of mourners Saturday buried the victims of a twin suicide attack on a Shiite mosque in eastern Afghanistan, as the death toll rose to 35, officials said.
Two suicide bombers dressed as women struck a Shiite mosque in Gardez, capital of Paktia province, Friday as it was crowded with worshippers for Friday prayer.
The burqa-clad attackers shot at the mosque’s security guards before opening fire on worshippers then detonating their explosives.
“The death toll from Friday’s mosque attack in Gardez has jumped to 35 with 94 wounded,” Paktia governor Shamim Khan Katawazi told AFP.
Provincial police chief Raz Mohammad Mandozai confirmed the toll.
Officials had earlier said 29 people were killed and more than 80 wounded.
“Today, we held funeral ceremony and buried all the martyred of Friday’s attack,” a weeping Sayed Moharram, who lost his 16-year old son, told AFP from a graveyard on the outskirts of Gardez where hundreds of people attended the ceremony.
“It is very difficult for me to accept my son is no more with me,” he said.
Haji Sultan, 70, who also attended, accused the government of “negligence” in providing security for the Shiite minority.
“The enemies of Afghanistan want to create division by carrying out attacks on Shiite people, but they cannot win, it will further increase hatred towards the enemies,” he said.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.
The Taliban denied involvement but in recent years the Islamic State group has carried out attacks on Shiites in Afghanistan.
The attack comes as urban areas across Afghanistan have been rocked by a surge in violence in recent months, with both Islamic State and Taliban insurgents targeting security forces and government installations.
The Taliban have not claimed a major attack in a city for weeks as they come under increased pressure to agree to peace talks with the Afghan government.
But IS has carried out multiple attacks in the eastern city of Jalalabad and the capital Kabul in recent months, targeting everything from government ministries to a midwife training center. Last month an IS suicide bomber blew himself up near Kabul international airport, killing 23 people including AFP driver Mohammad Akhtar.
The uptick in violence comes as US and Afghan forces intensify ground and air offensives against IS, and the Taliban step up their turf war with the group.
Earlier this week more than 150 IS fighters surrendered in northern Afghanistan — in a move that Afghan security forces and the Taliban hailed as the end of the extremist group in the north of the country.

Exit mobile version