Taliban vow punishment as death toll from Shia mosque blast mounts
Taliban vow punishment as death toll from Shia mosque blast mounts
The Taliban have pledged punishment for those behind Friday’s deadly bomb attack on a Shia mosque in northern Afghanistan, for which the Daesh terrorist group has claimed responsibility.
The blast happened as worshipers were offering prayers at the mosque in the Khanabad Bandar area in Afghanistan’s northeastern city of Kunduz, killing scores of people and injuring more than 140 others, according to TOLO news agency.
Local security officials said over 300 people were attending the prayers when the attack took place, with media reports citing eyewitnesses as saying, “More than 100 people were killed and 20 others were injured in the explosion in mosque.”
The Daesh-K, the Afghan branch of the Takfiri terrorist outfit, claimed responsibility for the attack late Friday in a statement issued on its Amaq news channel.
Zabiullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman and the Taliban deputy minister of information and culture, confirmed the terrorist attack and vowed that the perpetrators of the “heinous” act will be punished.
“A Shia mosque was blown up by Takfiris in the Khan Abad Bandar area of central Kunduz province this afternoon, killing several of our compatriots and injuring several others,” Mujahid said on Twitter.
“The Islamic Emirate strongly condemns this heinous act and promises to find and punish the perpetrators of this heinous crime. God willing.”
The deadly bomb attack took place a few hours after Mujahid told TOLO news agency that the Taliban did not consider Daesh a “threat” but a “headache.” He said Daesh lacked popular support in the country and would certainly very soon be “suppressed.”
The Taliban say the Daesh terrorist group in Afghanistan is much of a “headache” than a threat and would soon be destroyed.
The Takfiri terrorist group has claimed responsibility for numerous attacks in Afghanistan.
The ongoing violence after the Taliban takeover has plunged Afghanistan into a dire situation, with international aid agencies calling for urgent action to support millions of struggling Afghans.
The Taliban have gained almost complete control of the country since the US military pullout from Afghanistan in August.








