Islamic State in Afghanistan claims responsibility for attacks targeting Taliban
The Islamic State affiliate in Afghanistan claimed responsibility Sunday for a series of blasts over the weekend in the country’s east that reportedly killed several people and injured tens more in another escalation of violence as the Taliban works to consolidate its control.
The improvised explosive devices
were set off Saturday and Sunday around the city of Jalalabad, capital of the
eastern province of Nangahar and known as a stronghold for the Islamic
State-Khorasan (ISIS-K). Though they are both Islamist groups, ISIS-K opposes
the Taliban, which it accuses of not being extreme enough.
The Islamic State group’s Amaq News
Agency said on its Telegram channel that six attacks Saturday and Sunday killed
or injured over 35 Taliban members, Reuters reported.
Bilal Karimi, a Taliban spokesman,
said a bombing Sunday in Jalalabad targeted a Taliban vehicle, killing one
child and injuring two people, among them a Taliban member.
We have started investigations into
the incident to reach the culprits,” Karimi said.
But three residents, speaking on the
condition of anonymity because they feared angering the Taliban, told The
Washington Post that at least three civilians were killed, including a child,
and scores more injured in the attack. Residents said the blast also knocked
down a major power line, though it was restored later in the day.
The violence followed a series of
explosions Saturday. One resident said four people were killed and 22 injured
in five incidents in the city.
Karimi said that only “minor blasts”
took place Saturday and “a number of casualties were reported,” without
providing specifics.
ISIS-K previously claimed
responsibility for an attack at the Kabul airport on Aug. 26, which killed some
170 Afghan civilians and 13 U.S. service members at the already chaotic end of
the U.S. withdrawal of troops after two decades in Afghanistan.
The Taliban rapidly regained control
of the country amid the hasty exit of U.S. forces last month. The extremist
group has since faced pockets of public opposition, including a resistance
movement in Panjshir province and street protests by women who oppose the
Taliban’s brutal gender-based restrictions.
At the same time, the political
vacuum left by the swift fall of Afghanistan’s Western-backed government could
further embolden ISIS-K, analysts have warned. The Taliban and U.S. forces
previously found common ground fighting the Islamic State affiliate.
The Taliban leadership has said the
group has softened its stances since it last ruled Afghanistan, from 1996 to
2001, when it became an international pariah for policies such as banning
education for girls. Over its last month in power, however, the Taliban has
formed an all-male government, imposed dress codes and segregated women at
universities, and told female employees to stay home.
On Friday, the group ordered high
schools for male students to reopen — but made no mention of schools for female
students.