12 Dead in Kabul Mosque Blast

At least 12 people were killed after a bomb ripped through a mosque in the Afghan capital Kabul during Friday prayers as worshippers gathered for the second day of the Eid al-Fitr holiday, officials said.
Ferdous Faramarz, spokesman for
the Kabul police, said the mosque's Imam, Mofti Naiman, was among the 12 dead,
and at least 15 other people were wounded.
There was no immediate claim of
responsibility for the attack.
An image circulating on social
media showed three bodies lying on the floor of the mosque, which showed minor
damage.
Taliban insurgents have called a
three-day ceasefire for the holiday, which marks the end of the Ramadan holy
fasting month.
The blast came less than a week
after an explosion at a school killed over 90 people, most of them schoolgirls
from the ethnic Hazara Shiite Muslim minority. The Taliban denied involvement
and denounced that attack, and no one has claimed responsibility for it. US officials
believe it may have been the work of a rival militant group such as ISIS.
Violence, including attacks on
civilians, have increased in Afghanistan, even as the United States has begun
an operation to withdraw all its remaining troops over the next four months.
Just this week the last of the US
troops left southern Kandahar Air Base, while some NATO troops still remained.
At the war's peak more than 30,000 US troops were stationed in Kandahar, the
Taliban heartland.