Suicide attack on Kabul Shia mosque kills 13
A suicide bomber blew himself up at the entrance to a Shia Muslim mosque in Kabul as other attackers stormed the building, killing at least 13 people including worshippers gathering for Friday prayers, officials said.
Islamic State, which has launched several attacks against minority Shia targets in Afghanistan, claimed responsibility, the jihadist group's news agency said.
The assault sparked chaos as worshippers fled and others frantically searched for missing family members.
"The attackers are slaughtering people like sheep but there's no one to go and rescue them," Murtaza, a young boy whose parents were trapped inside, said as the attack unfolded. "A lot of people are on the ground and no one is trying to rescue them."
By Friday evening police said they had secured the mosque in the Khair Khana area of the capital, and all three attackers were dead.
Witnesses said they had thrown grenades, and police officials said a suicide bomber detonated himself at the gate.
At least 10 civilians were killed, including women and children, while another 30 were wounded, Ministry of Interior spokesman Najib Danish said. At least three policemen were also killed and eight wounded, he said.
Police said they rescued more than 100 worshippers.
At least 15 of the wounded were taken to city hospitals, said Ismail Kawosi, a spokesman for the Ministry of Public Health.
One witness, Sayed Pacha, said four attackers had entered the mosque.
"At first a suicide bomber opened fire and martyred two security guards at the entrance of the mosque and then they entered inside," he told Reuters.
The area around the mosque was later rocked by explosions, whose source was not immediately clear.
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