10 May,2021 07:15 AM IST | Kabul | Agencies
An injured student is transported to a hospital after a bomb explosion near a school in west of Kabul, Afghanistan, on Saturday. Pic/PTI/AP
Grieving families buried their dead on Sunday following a horrific bombing at a girls' school in the Afghan capital that killed 50 people, many of them pupils between 11 and 15 years old.
The number of wounded in Saturday's attack climbed to more than 100, said Interior Ministry spokesman Tariq Arian. In the western neighbourhood of Dasht-e-Barchi, families buried their dead amid angry recriminations at a government they said has failed to protect them from repeated attacks in the mostly Shiite Muslim neighbourhood.
"The government reacts after the incident, it doesn't do anything before the incident," said Mohammad Baqir, Alizada, 41, who had gathered to bury his niece, Latifa, a Grade 11 student the Syed Al-Shahda school.
Three explosions outside the school entrance struck as students were leaving for the day, said Arian. The blasts targeted Afghanistan's ethnic Hazaras who dominate the Dasht-e-Barchi neighbourhood, where the bombings occurred. Most Hazaras are Shiite Muslims. Agencies
Three people, including a four-year-old girl, were injured in a shooting in New York City's Times Square, police said. The shooting took place at around 5 pm on Saturday at 44th Street and 7th Avenue in Manhattan, Xinhua news agency reported citing the police as saying. The injured people were sent to a nearby hospital and are expected to survive, and police believed that none of the victims knew each other or the shooter.
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