Car Bomb Kills 8, Wounds 15 in Afghan Capital

A car bomb killed eight people and wounded more than
15 others in Kabul Sunday, officials said, the latest attack to rock the Afghan
capital.
Kabul has been hit by a wave of deadly violence in
recent months despite the Taliban and government engaging in peace talks to end
the country's long conflict.
Interior ministry spokesman Tariq Arian blamed
"terrorists" for the attack, and said casualties included women and
children.
A security source said the car bomb detonated in the
west of the capital, and a health ministry official also confirmed the blast.
"It was a powerful explosion that has caused a
lot of damage to houses in the vicinity," the source said.
Television footage showed at least two cars on fire,
with plumes of thick black smoke billowing into the sky.
No group has so far claimed responsibility.
The jihadist Islamic State has claimed
responsibility for some of the recent attacks in the capital.
Dozens of people, mostly students, were killed when
IS jihadists attacked two education centres, including one at Kabul University
that saw gunmen open fire on classrooms.
The group has also claimed a series of recent rocket
attacks.
On Saturday five rockets were fired at Bagram
Airfield, a major US airbase north of Kabul, but there were no casualties.
Sunday's car bomb comes just two days after 15
children were killed and many more wounded when a motorbike laden with
explosives blew up near a religious gathering in a remote part of Ghazni,
officials said, blaming the Taliban.
The children had gathered to recite Koranic verses,
a regular activity on the Islamic holy day of Friday.
The Taliban denied involvement and said the blast
occurred when "unexploded ordnance" detonated near the children.
Violence has surged across several provinces in
Afghanistan this year.
Between January and September more than 2,100
civilians were killed and more than 3,800 wounded, according to the UN mission
in Afghanistan.
Peace talks -- which opened in September in the
Qatari capital of Doha -- are currently on a break until early January.
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has called for the
next round of negotiations to be held at home.
Outgoing US President Donald Trump has pushed to end
America's longest war, with Washington signing a deal with the Taliban earlier
this year committing to pulling all of its troops from the country by May 2021.