Both devices were of a magnetic type attached to vehicles that
have become common in Afghanistan, generally causing fewer
casualties and less damage than suicide attacks, but used in
targeted killings that undermine confidence in security.
"I was busy with a customer when a boom shook the store," said
Ahmad Murtaza, a shopkeeper in Kabul's western area of Kote
Sangi.
"I saw people were taking victims from the blast site, I don't
know whether they were dead or injured."
Interior ministry spokesman Qari Sayeed Khosty said the
explosion was caused by a sticky bomb and hurt two people, but
gave no details.
A similar magnetic bomb had destroyed a minibus in western Kabul
on Saturday, killing and wounding several people.
(Writing by James Mackenzie; Editing by Ed Osmond and Clarence
Fernandez, Editing by William Maclean)
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