At least seven civilians were killed and seven wounded when
a car bomb was detonated in the Afghan capital of Kabul during rush hour
Wednesday, an interior ministry spokesman said.
The spokesman, Nasrat
Rahimi, said the bomb had gone off in a neighborhood that is near the interior
ministry and north of Kabul airport.
He said the dead were
all civilians, adding, "This is the initial information, more details
later."
Nasrat Rahimi added on Twitter that the death toll may
change as the target area has not yet been cleared.
At least five
children were among the victims, Tolo News reported, citing security sources.
The blast occurred at
around 7:25 a.m. local time on Wednesday in the Qasaba area in Police District
15 of Kabul city, where several foreign NGOs are located.
A source at the
interior ministry said the blast was detonated by a suicide bomber in the car,
and that it was targeting a convoy of foreign advisers with the Interior
Ministry. Local media said some vehicles were also damaged following the blast.
No sect has claimed responsibility yet. Both the Taliban and
the Islamic State group are active in Kabul, which is one of the deadliest
places in the war-torn country for civilians.
The blast came one
day after Afghan President Ashraf Ghani announced that Kabul would release
three high-ranking Taliban prisoners in an apparent prisoner swap with Western
hostages who were kidnapped by the insurgents in 2016.
The three Taliban
prisoners include Anas Haqqani, who was seized in 2014 and whose older brother
is the deputy Taliban leader and head of the Haqqani network, a notorious
Taliban affiliate, Hindustan Times reports.
Ghani did not specify
the fate of the Western hostages - an Australian and an American, both
professors at the American University in Kabul - and it was not clear when or
where they would be freed.
The two, American Kevin King and Australian Timothy Weeks,
were kidnapped in August 2016 from the heart of Kabul.
The American hostages later appeared looking haggard in a
Taliban hostage video, with the insurgents going on to say that King was in
poor health.
Ghani noted in his
speech that "their health has been deteriorating while in the custody of
the terrorists".
Gani also did not
state when or where the Taliban prisoners would be freed. But he said that he
hoped the decision would help "pave the way" for the start of
unofficial direct talks between his government and the Taliban, who have long
refused to negotiate with the administration in Kabul.
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