Kabul suicide bomber kills 48 in tuition centre attack

Teaching was under way when the bomb went off
Forty-eight people have been killed and 67 injured in a bomb explosion at an education centre in Afghanistan's capital, Kabul, the country's health ministry says.
Police say a suicide bomber walked into the centre while teaching was under way and detonated his bomb belt.
Many of those killed are believed to be teenagers who were getting extra tuition as they prepared for university entrance exams.
The Taliban has denied involvement.
This latest attack came hours after the Taliban said it could no longer guarantee safe passage for Red Cross staff working in Afghanistan, amid a row over the treatment of Taliban prisoners in a jail in Kabul.
The attack on the education centre took place at about 16:00 local time (11:30 GMT) in a mostly Shia Muslim neighbourhood of the city.The Shia community in Afghanistan has been repeatedly targeted by Sunni Muslim extremists of the Islamic State group, which views the Shia practice of Islam as heretical.   
"We can confirm the attack was caused by a suicide bomber on foot. The bomber detonated himself inside the education centre," police spokesman Hashmat Stanikzai was quoted as saying by AFP news agency.
A student told AFP that as many as 100 students may have been inside the building at the time.
Another man, who gave his name as Assadullah, told the news agency how he ran toward the blast scene to try and rescue his 17-year-old brother inside.
"He was a smart and energetic boy, top of his class," he said. "Now... I am not sure he will survive."
Meanwhile, local officials said at least nine policemen and 35 soldiers were killed in an attack on a military outpost in the northern province of Baghlan early on
Wednesday morning.
Relatives pictured next to the coffins of policeman who were killed in the Baghlan attack
Afghanistan has seen a recent upsurge in militant violence, including a major Taliban assault on the eastern city of Ghazni.
At least 100 members of the security forces were killed in the fighting at Ghazni, officials have said.
The United Nations warn that as many as 150 civilians may have also been killed.
Tadamichi Yamamoto, the UN's Special Representative for Afghanistan, made an appeal on Wednesday for violence to end.
"The extreme human suffering caused by the fighting in Ghazni highlights the urgent need for the war in Afghanistan to end," he said in a statement.
BBC Pashto journalist Assadullah Jalalzai wrote his account of living three days there under siege before he was able to escape.
Afghan Security forces have now regained control of much of the city, reports on
Wednesday say.

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