Four other Shiites were killed in the
northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif when a bomb strapped to a bicycle
exploded as a convoy of Afghan Shiites was driving down the road,
shouting slogans for the festival known as Ashoura. Health Ministry
spokesman Sakhi Kargar gave the death toll and said 21 people also were
wounded in that attack.
The Kabul bomber blew himself up in the
midst of a crowd of men, women and children gathered outside the Abul
Fazl shrine to commemorate the seventh century death of the Prophet
Muhammad's grandson Imam Hussein. Some men were beating themselves in
mourning and food was being distributed.
The shrine, which is near the presidential
palace, was packed with worshippers and dozens more were crammed into
the courtyard. One witness said the bomber was at the end of a line and
detonated his explosives near one of the gates to the shrine.
Sayed Kabir Amiri, who is in charge of Kabul
hospitals said 54 were killed and more than 160 wounded in the blast.
He said casualties were taken to several hospitals and the toll could
rise.
Religiously motivated attacks on Shiites are
rare in Afghanistan although they are common in neighboring Pakistan.
No group claimed responsibility for Tuesday's blasts, reminiscent of the
wave of sectarian attacks that shook Iraq during the height of the war
there.
The Taliban strongly condemned the two
attacks and said in a statement to news organizations that they deeply
regretted that innocent Afghans were killed and wounded.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai, speaking at a
news conference after meeting German Chancellor Angela Merkel in
Berlin, said the attack was unprecedented in scope.
He said it was "the first time that on such
an important religious day in Afghanistan terrorism of that horrible
nature is taking place."
Mohammad Bakir Shaikzada, the top Shiite
cleric in Kabul, said he could not remember a similar attack having
taken place on such a scale.
"This is a crime against Muslims during the
holy day of Ashoura. We Muslims will never forget these attacks. It is
the enemy of the Muslims who are carrying them out," he said, declining
to place blame.
Shiites make up about 20 percent of
Afghanistan's 30 million people, most of them ethnic Hazaras. Although
thousands of Hazaras were massacred by the Taliban during fighting in
the 1990s, Afghan insurgents -- nearly all of them Sunnis -- in recent
years have focused their attacks primarily on U.S.-led NATO troops and
Afghan security forces.
It was unclear whether Tuesday's attacks
mark a change in Afghan Taliban strategy or were carried out by al-Qaida
or another group based in Pakistan, where Sunni attacks on Shiites are
common. Hard-line Sunnis consider Shiites nonbelievers because their
customs and traditions differ from the majority sect.
The last incident of violence between
Shiites and Sunnis following the U.S. invasion 10 years ago occurred in
early 2006, during Ashoura commemorations in the western city of Herat.
During those riots, blamed on Islamic extremists, five people were
killed and more than 50 injured.
Mahood Khan, who is in charge of the Abul
Fazl shrine, said the explosion occurred just outside a courtyard where
dozens of worshippers were lined up as they filed in and out of the
packed building.
A few minutes after the blast, bodies could
be seen loaded into the trunks of cars while wounded were led away by
friends and relatives. Survivors wept in the streets.
"It was a very powerful blast," Khan said.
"The food was everywhere. It was out of control. Everyone was crying,
shouting. It is a disaster."
Mustafa, a shopkeeper, said he and his
mother were delivering food to the worshippers when the blast occurred.
Two groups of 150 to 200 people from Kabul had just prayed at the shrine
and left.
Another group of more than 100 from Logar province was entering when the explosion occurred.
He said the suicide bomber was at the end of
the line of worshippers from Logar when he blew himself up near one of
the gates to the shrine.
"It was very loud. My ears went deaf and I
was blown 3 meters," said Mustafa, who uses only one name. "There was
smoke and red blood on the floor of the shrine. There were people lying
everywhere."
The shrine's loudspeaker continued to blast a
recitation of the Quran as ambulances carried bodies and wounded away.
Women stood outside the shrine wailing and holding crying children.
The shrine is close to the palace where
Karzai lives and who is in Europe to attend an international conference
on Afghanistan. It is named after Abul Fazl, who was an adviser to a
14th century Mogul emperor. The shrine and its blue minaret is one of
Kabul's better known shrines.
It is located in Murad Khane area near the
Kabul river, a district that has been listed by the World Monuments Fund
as one of its 100 most endangered sites of cultural heritage.
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