A suicide attack eight police and six civilians have been killed while a further 18 have been wounded.”
A suicide attacker blew himself up outside a political gathering in Kabul killing at least 14 people, officials said Thursday, highlighting the deepening divisions in the war-torn country.
The deadly attack, claimed by Daesh in a brief message via its Amaq propaganda agency, was the latest to hit the Afghan capital, where insurgents have been stepping up assaults in a devastating show of force.
Supporters of Atta Mohammad Noor, the powerful governor of the northern province of Balkh and a vocal critic of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, had been holding an event inside a wedding hall at the time of the blast.
Noor, a senior leader of the Tajik-dominated Jamiat-e Islami party, has been an outspoken critic of Ghani and the National Unity Government.
It is not the first time that top officials in the Jamiat political group have been targeted by attackers.
Foreign Minister Salahuddin Rabbani, who heads Jamiat, survived an attack at a funeral in Kabul in June where suicide bombers tore through a row of mourners. Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah also escaped unharmed.
Political and ethnic rivalries have been intensifying ahead of next year’s long-delayed district and parliamentary elections, which would pave the way for the 2019 presidential ballot.
Noor has previously hinted that he may run for the country’s highest office.
Interior Ministry spokesman Najib Danish had earlier put the death toll at nine, including seven policemen and two civilians.
“I saw many bodies including police and civilians lying in blood.”
Mohammad Farhad Azimi, a member of Parliament and supporter of Noor, said he saw “many casualties.”
On Wednesday Ghani — who is a Pashtun, the largest ethnic group in Afghanistan — sacked the Independent Election Commission chief Najibullah Ahmadzai after technical and political bungling, fueling speculation the vote will not go ahead.
That came after the recent firing of Education Minister Asadullah Hanafi Balkhi, who was considered a close ally of Noor, and one of Ghani’s advisers Ahmadullah Alizai.
Noor has recently called for the return of Vice President Abdul Rashid Dostum, a powerful ethnic Uzbek warlord who fled to Turkey in May after he was accused of raping and torturing a political rival in 2016.
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