No fewer than 27 people dead, 29 others wounded as gunmen reportedly attacked at a remembrance ceremony for a minority Shiite leader in Afghanistan’s capital on Friday as revealed by officials.
According to Health Ministry spokesman, Wahidullah Mayar, the injured had been taken to hospitals in Kabul.
All of the casualties were civilians, said interior ministry spokesman Nasrat Rahimi.
Several prominent political leaders escaped the ceremony unhurt, including Abdullah Abdullah, the country’s chief executive and a top contender in last year’s presidential election.
Afghan security forces were still trying to flush the gunmen out of a half-finished apartment building, Mr Rahimi said.
Dozens of Afghan security forces had cordoned off area.
The Taliban have denied they were behind the attack, and while no one has claimed responsibility for carrying it out, Afghanistan’s upstart Islamic State affiliate has declared war on the country’s minority Shiites.
Most of the people attending the memorial service were Shiite.
The attack came just days after the United States and the Taliban signed an ambitious peace deal that lays out a conditions-based path to the withdrawal of American forces from Afghanistan.
Any US troop pullout would be tied in part to promises by the Taliban to fight terrorism and IS.
Friday’s ceremony was held in the mostly Shiite Dasht-e-Barchi neighbourhood of the capital, Kabul.
The memorial marked 25 years since the death of Abdul Ali Mazari, the leader of Afghanistan’s minority ethnic Hazaras, who are mostly Shiite Muslims.
He was killed in 1995 by the Taliban as they moved to take control of Kabul, which had been destroyed by a brutal civil war among mujahedeen groups, including Mr Mazari’s.
Any US troop pullout would be tied in part to promises by the Taliban to fight terrorism and IS.
Friday’s ceremony was held in the mostly Shiite Dasht-e-Barchi neighbourhood of the capital, Kabul.
The memorial marked 25 years since the death of Abdul Ali Mazari, the leader of Afghanistan’s minority ethnic Hazaras, who are mostly Shiite Muslims.
He was killed in 1995 by the Taliban as they moved to take control of Kabul, which had been destroyed by a brutal civil war among mujahedeen groups, including Mr Mazari’s.
Any US troop pullout would be tied in part to promises by the Taliban to fight terrorism and IS.
Friday’s ceremony was held in the mostly Shiite Dasht-e-Barchi neighbourhood of the capital, Kabul.
The memorial marked 25 years since the death of Abdul Ali Mazari, the leader of Afghanistan’s minority ethnic Hazaras, who are mostly Shiite Muslims.
He was killed in 1995 by the Taliban as they moved to take control of Kabul, which had been destroyed by a brutal civil war among mujahedeen groups, including Mr Mazari’s.