Twin ISIL suicide blasts kill 29 in Afghanistan's Kabul
At least nine journalists among the dead as ISIL suicide bombers launch double bombing attack in Afghan capital.
At least 29 people, including nine journalists, have been killed and dozens wounded after two explosions hit Kabul, according to Afghan health officials.
The blasts went off during rush hour on Monday morning in the Shash Darak area of the Afghan capital.
Al Jazeera's Jennifer Glasse, reporting from Kabul, said the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group claimed responsibility for the attack.
In the first explosion, a motorcycle-riding attacker detonated himself close to the National Directorate of Security (NDS), the main Afghan intelligence agency, TOLOnews quoted an interior ministry spokesman as saying.
In the explosion that followed about half an hour later, a second suicide bomber targeted emergency medical workers and journalists who had arrived near the scene of the first blast.
Al Jazeera's Glasse said the second suicide bomber was posing as a journalist.
The Afghan Journalists Safety Committee reported that nine journalists who rushed to cover the aftermath of the first explosion were killed in the second blast.
A spokesperson for the Afghan health ministry said the two attacks killed at least 29 people and wounded 49 others, according to TOLOnews.
TOLOnews also reported that its cameraman, Yar Mohammad Tokhi, who had worked for the company for 12 years, was among those who were killed in the attack.
Meanwhile, AFP news agency reported that its chief photographer in Kabul, Shah Marai, was also killed.
Reporter, Ghazi Rasooli, and cameraman, Nowroz Ali Rajabi, of the Afghan 1TV television channel were also reported killed.
As was two staff members of Azadi Radio, the Dari language service of Radio Free Europe.
Radio Free Europe identified the two journalists who died as Abadullah Hananzai and Moharram Durrani. A third staffer, Sabwoon Kakar, was injured.
An Al Jazeera photographer, Seyyed Nasser Hashemi, was also hurt in the incident. He is currently in the hospital recovering from his injuries, Al Jazeera's Glasse said.
TOLOnews also reported that two other journalists were wounded in the second blast.
The death of the nine journalists is considered as the worst attack on Afghan media in modern history, Glasse said.
"It's a very grim morning here," she said describing the situation in the Afghan capital.
She added that there are many fortified streets near the site of the attack.
"There's a lot of security in that area - it's not far from NATO headquarters - and security has been beefed up around the Afghan capital, but clearly they haven't been able to stop these kinds of attacks."
The explosions on Monday come just a week after a blast hit a voter registration centre in Kabul, killing at least 57 people and wounding more than 100 others.
Separately, at least 11 Afghan schoolchildren were killed in Kandahar province on Monday when a suicide car bomber hit a convoy of Romanian troops patrolling the area as part of the NATO force.
Attacks have multiplied in recent days in advance of the long-delayed parliamentary and district council elections scheduled for October 20 this year.
"The series of attacks here in Kabul have made the Afghan capital most dangerous place in Afghanistan to be," Al Jazeera's Glasse said.
My Response:
Audience: I think that the audience of this article are the people of Afghanistan who are above voting age.
Purpose: The purpose of this article is to show the lack of improvement within the Afghan government and political systems. it is almost a warning to the Afghan people of the instability and uncertainty that comes about from this country's political side.
Bias: I think that there is some bias against the Afghan government. This article talks about how Kabul is the most dangerous place to be, and how the government should be doing more to help that. However, it is not entirely the government's fault.
My Opinion: I hate to hear about these kinds of things happening. It is also very shocking and eye opening to think about how these victims were women and children who were just trying to abide by the regulations of the government. This makes me think that the government is in charge for these kinds of acts, however i think it is due to more than just a poor political system. Afghanistan hasn't always been the most stable place to live, let alone Kabul - its capital. I think that the atmosphere and culture of the people there has been shaped by the violence that has spread across the nation, therefor making it very hard for the government to control this type of situation.
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