Islamic State says targeted Taliban in Kabul suicide attack that killed at least 6
Sept. 3, 2024, 1:45 p.m.
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The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing in Afghanistan that resulted in the deaths of six people on Monday (September 2).
The IS group’s Amaq media wing, on Tuesday (September 3), said that it had targeted the Taliban government’s prosecution service.
Details of deadly attack
The statement, disseminated via the Telegram messaging app, went on to add that “the suicide bomber waited until the time when the prosecutor’s employees were leaving their shifts” before detonating in the middle of a crowd.
Advertisement The stated purpose of the bombing, which Kabul police said killed at least six people and wounded 13 more on Monday afternoon, was “to avenge Muslims held in Taliban prisons”.
The IS group’s statement said that the cumulative figure for the number of dead and wounded people together stood at “more than 45”.
Taliban authorities claimed only three people were killed in the attack, while a hospital source reported the toll as 20. Such inconsistencies are not news and occur quite often in line with each party’s propaganda.
Taliban’s IS problem continues
Last month, AFP quoted a Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid as saying that IS “existed here before but we suppressed them very hard”.
“No such groups exist here that can pose a threat to anyone,” he had said back then.
However, the reality paints a different picture. The IS group is, and has been for a considerable time, a major adversary of the ruling Taliban. In the past, they have carried out similar attacks targeting schools, hospitals, mosques, and Shia communities throughout the nation.
Prior to the Monday attack, The Islamic State’s Khorasan Province (ISKP) branch had claimed a suicide attack in Afghanistan’s southern city of Kandahar in March. Kandahar is the Taliban’s historic stronghold.
Despite the Taliban's takeover of Afghanistan following the withdrawal of US and NATO forces, which has resulted in a decrease in militant opposition to their rule, experts contend that the regional IS affiliate, ISKP, continues to pose a significant threat.
Advertisement With inputs from agencies