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Afghan bomb
attacks kill 59 schoolboys
KABUL—Afghanistan’s biggest suicide bomb attack is now known to have
killed 59 schoolboys, the Education Ministry said on Friday, announcing
a nationwide ban on students greeting politicians or dignitaries.
Five teachers and six members of parliament were also killed in
Tuesday’s blast in the relatively peaceful north of Afghanistan which
has shaken public faith in the ability of the government and foreign
troops in the country to provide security. The suicide bomber blew
himself up as schoolboys lined up to greet a visiting delegation of
opposition parliamentary deputies in the town of Baghlan.
“We have 64 martyrs, 59 of them are children, and five of them are
teachers,” said Education Ministry spokesman Zahoor Afghan. “There are
96 wounded. Of those three are teachers, the rest are students.”
Officials had previously put the total death toll at 52. As well as the
boys, teachers and parliamentarians, a number of police and adult
civilians were also killed in the attack. No schoolgirls were among the
dead, Afghan said. “The minister has repeatedly requested school
children not to be sent to any welcoming ceremony, unless it is purely
for educational programs,” said spokesman Afghan. “We told the
provincial educational heads not to involve children in any program
other than educational, but they did not listen to us.
“But this time the education minister has issued a firm order and has
strongly emphasized not to ever use any school children in any gathering
or ceremonies after the incident in Baghlan.”
A number of the wounded children were in critical condition with
internal bleeding. Some might well die. “It is quite possible the number
of martyrs will increase because as of yesterday the death toll was 63,
but one schoolboy succumbed to his injuries and died,” Afghan said,
adding that the region lacked medicine and proper health care
facilities. Some families had taken away the bodies of their relatives
straight after the attack and it may be some time before a final death
toll is known. It was also too early to say who might have been
responsible for the blast, officials said. Afghan police detained two
men on suspicion of involvement, the governor of Baghlan province said
on Friday.
Taliban insurgents have carried out more than 130 suicide attacks in
Afghanistan this year, but denied they carried out the Baghlan attack.
The denial has sparked widespread speculation and conspiracy theories
over who might be responsible amid a general atmosphere of fear and
suspicion. One of the two men arrested in Baghlan was a mosque prayer
leader, the other a resident of the town’s industrial zone where the
blast took place, provincial governor Mohammad Alam Ishaaqzai told
Reuters. “The initial investigation shows these men may have had a hand
in this attack,” he said, but declined to say whether the men were
affiliated to any insurgent or political group.
A high-ranking Interior Ministry team from Kabul were questioning the
pair, he said.
Northern Afghanistan has been relatively peaceful and prosperous
compared with the south and east, where Taliban suicide attacks are
common and insurgents are locked in daily battles with Afghan and
foreign forces.
Dozens of schoolchildren and five teachers were among those killed in a
suicide attack in northern Afghanistan earlier this week — the country’s
deadliest since the fall of the Taliban — the government said Friday.
The 59 schoolchildren had lined up to greet a group of lawmakers
visiting a sugar factory in the northern province of Baghlan on Tuesday
when a suicide bomber detonated explosives.
“The education minister has ordered that no children should be ever
again be used in these sort of events,” said Zahoor Afghan, an Education
Ministry spokesman. He said the children ranged in age from 8 to 18. In
all, the explosion claimed the lives at least 75 people, including
several parliamentarians, and wounded 96. It was the deadliest attack in
the country since the toppling of Taliban regime from power in the 2001
U.S.-led invasion.—Agencies
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