At least 19 killed in suicide attack on Kabul education centre

Death toll expected to rise after bomb blast in area home to ethnic minority targeted in previous attacks

A woman arrives on a motorbike to search for a relative at a hospital in Kabul after a blast in a learning centre in the Dasht-e-Barchi area of Afghanistan's capital. Photograph: AFP
A woman arrives on a motorbike to search for a relative at a hospital in Kabul after a blast in a learning centre in the Dasht-e-Barchi area of Afghanistan's capital. Photograph: AFP

A suicide attack at a tutoring centre in the Afghan capital Kabul killed at least 19 people and wounded dozens, police said on Friday, but there was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blast.

Many of those living in the western area where the blast occurred are Hazara, an ethnic mostly Shia Muslim minority targeted in past attacks by the Islamic State terror group and others. Kabul police spokesman Khalid Zadran said the official toll was 19 people dead and 27 wounded.

He said the attack took place at a private tutoring centre where an exam was taking place. Schools are usually closed in Afghanistan on Fridays. “Attacking civilian targets proves the enemy’s inhuman cruelty and lack of moral standards,” he said, without specifying who was believed to be behind the attack.

The official death toll was expected to rise. A hospital source said 23 people had been killed. A Taliban source said 33 people had been killed and that female students were among the casualties.

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Ghulm Sadiq, a local resident, said he was at home when he heard a loud sound and went outside to see smoke rising from the centre. He and neighbours rushed to help. “My friends and I were able to move around 15 wounded and nine dead bodies from the explosion site ... other bodies were lying under chairs and tables inside the classroom,” he said.

Karen Decker, the US charge d’affaires in Afghanistan, condemned the blast. “Targeting a room full of students taking exams is shameful; all students should be able to pursue an education in peace & without fear,” she said in a message on Twitter.

The age of the students was not immediately clear, but private institutes such as the one targeted prepare teenage students in their final years of high school for university entrance exams.

Girls’ high schools have been closed in Kabul in recent months after the ruling Taliban made a U-turn on promises to open all schools, but Kabul residents and education workers have said that female students have still been attending private tutoring centres.

Since taking over Afghanistan in August 2021, the Taliban have emphasised that they are securing the nation following decades of war, but in recent months there have been a series of blasts at mosques and civilian areas.

Teenage students were among the 24 people killed in a 2020 attack claimed by Islamic State at a similar education centre in west Kabul.