59 dead in Afghan shrine blasts

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Twin blasts at Afghan shrines on the holy day of Ashura left at least 59 people dead Tuesday, with most killed in a massive suicide attack in Kabul which ripped through a crowd of worshippers.
The attack in the capital, which killed 55 and wounded 134, plus a second in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif, came the day after an international meeting in Germany on the future of Afghanistan following 10 years of war.
The Kabul blast was the deadliest strike on the capital in three years and President Hamid Karzai said it was the first time insurgents had struck on such an important religious day.
It erupted at the entrance to a riverside shrine in the city centre, where hundreds of singing Shia Muslims had gathered to mark Ashura along with men whipping their bare backs as part of the traditional mourning ritual.
“I was there watching people mourning when there was suddenly a huge explosion,” eyewitness Ahmad Fawad said. “Some people around me fell down injured. I wasn’t hurt, so I got up and started running. It was horrible.”
Men and women at the scene sobbed as they surveyed the aftermath and screamed slogans denouncing Al-Qaeda and the Taliban, an AFP photographer at the scene said.
One young girl, dressed in a green shalwar kameez smeared in blood, stood shrieking, surrounded by the crumpled bodies of slain children.
The Taliban denied responsibility for the “inhumane” attacks in Kabul and Mazar, blaming “the invading enemy” — an apparent reference to the 140,000-strong foreign force in Afghanistan.
The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force declined to address that claim directly but its commander, US General John Allen, condemned the blasts as “an attack against Islam itself”.
Afghan interior ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi, meanwhile, directly blamed Taliban-led insurgents while confirming the death toll.
In an almost simultaneous blast to the one in Kabul, four people were killed in Mazar-i-Sharif near the northern city’s landmark Blue Mosque.
The dead people were all Shias, killed as they walked towards the mosque to carry out mourning rituals, said provincial governor’s spokesman Munir Ahmad Farhad.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who was due to arrive in London late Tuesday for talks with British Prime Minister David Cameron, cancelled his UK visit to return home after the deadly attacks.
A statement from Karzai’s office in Kabul said that on his return, he is slated to “meet the families of victims … to express his grief and share his sympathies”.
An Afghan security official speaking on condition of anonymity said Kabul was now on high alert, with extra security forces deployed in case of any follow-up attacks.
“The attacks looked designed to intentionally spark ethnic and sectarian violence but they could also galvanise resistance against what is seen as outside efforts to further disrupt Afghanistan’s already besieged relations,” wrote Kate Clark of Kabul think-tank the Afghanistan Analysts Network in a blog posting.
Kabul has been hit by an increasing number of spectacular attacks in 2011, including the September assassination of former president Burhanuddin Rabbani at his home, which badly stalled any hopes for Taliban reconciliation.
The blasts came the day after delegates at the Bonn conference agreed to extend international support for Afghanistan to 2024 following the scheduled withdrawal of all foreign combat troops by the end of 2014.
The attacks brought swift international condemnation.
The French foreign ministry described the blasts as “cowardly and odious”.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague said he was “shocked” by the attacks but the international community stood unshaken in its commitment to the war-ravaged country.
“Yesterday, I attended a conference in Bonn at which the international community pledged its long-term commitment to Afghanistan,” he said.
“That commitment will not be undermined by such acts of terrorism.”
A White House spokesman said the US condemns the “heinous” attacks and “continues to stand with the Afghan people against terrorism”.