Taliban pledge to step up security as Shi'ite victims buried in
Afghanistan
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[October 16, 2021]
KABUL (Reuters) -Taliban authorities
pledged to step up security at Shi'ite mosques as hundreds of people
gathered on Saturday to bury the victims of the second Islamic State
suicide attack on worshippers in a week.
Hardline Sunni group Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack
on the Fatima mosque in Kandahar that saw a group of suicide bombers
shoot their way into the mosque before blowing themselves up among the
worshippers during Friday prayers.
A health official said the casualty toll from the attack stood at 41
dead and 70 wounded but could rise further. "Some of the wounded are in
a critical condition and we are trying to transfer them to Kabul," he
said.
On Saturday, large crowds gathered to bury the white-shrouded victims in
a mass grave in the southern city of Kandahar.
The head of Kandahar police said units would be assigned to protect the
Shi'ite mosques which have so far been guarded by local volunteer forces
with special permission to carry weapons.
"Unfortunately they could not protect this area and in future we will
assign special security guards for the protection of mosques and
Madrasas," he said in a statement posted on Twitter by a Taliban
spokesman.
The attack on the Fatima mosque, the largest Shi'ite mosque in Kandahar,
also known as the Imam Bargah mosque, came a week after a similar attack
on a mosque in the northern city of Kunduz, which killed as many as 80
people.
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People carry a victim after a large explosion at a Shi'ite mosque in
Kandahar, Afghanistan, October 15, 2021. via REUTERS TV
Attacks on Shi'ite mosques and targets associated
with the Hazara ethnic minority, who make up the biggest Shi'ite
group in Afghanistan, were regular occurrences under the former
Western-backed government.
There has been deep shock as the attacks have continued since the
Taliban seized power in August, tarnishing the movement's claim to
have brought peace to Afghanistan after decades of war.
Since the takeover, Islamic State has conducted dozens of
operations, from small scale attacks on Taliban targets to
large-scale operations such as Friday's suicide bombing, killing
scores of civilians.
(Writing by James Mackenzie; Editing by Christina Fincher)
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