The death toll in a bomb attack that targeted schoolgirls in Kabul on Saturday has risen to 85, Afghan officials told CNN on Monday.
Another 147 people were wounded in the attack in front of the Sayed Al-Shuhada school, said Danish Hedayat, head of media for the second vice president of Afghanistan.
A car bomb was detonated in the neighborhood of Dasht-e-Barchi, and two more bombs exploded when students rushed out in panic.
There has been no official claim of responsibility yet. The Taliban has denied being behind Saturday evening’s blasts.
Conflict is raging in Afghanistan, with security forces in daily combat with the Taliban, who have waged war to overthrow the foreign-backed government since they were ousted from power in Kabul in 2001.
Although the United States did not meet a May 1 withdrawal deadline agreed in talks with the Taliban last year, its military pullout has begun, with President Joe Biden announcing that all troops will be gone by September 11.
But the foreign troop withdrawal has led to a surge in fighting between Afghan security forces and Taliban insurgents. Critics of the decision say the Islamist militants will make a grab for power and civilians live in fear of being subjected once more to brutal and oppressive Taliban rule.
The area where the blasts happened is home to a large community of Shiites from the Hazara ethnic minority, which has been targeted in the past by Islamic State, a Sunni militant group.
Officials said most of those killed were schoolgirls. Some families were still searching hospitals for their children on Sunday.
“The first blast was powerful and happened so close to the children that some of them could not be found,” an Afghan official, requesting anonymity, told Reuters.
On Sunday, civilians and policemen collected books and school bags strewn across a blood-stained road now busy with shoppers ahead of celebrations for Eid al-Fitr next week.
Bodies were still being collected from morgues as the first burials were conducted in the west of the city. Some families were still gathering Sunday outside hospitals to read names posted on the walls, and checking morgues.
“The entire night we carried bodies of young girls and boys to a graveyard and prayed for everyone wounded in the attack,” said Mohammed Reza Ali, who has been helping families of the victims at a private hospital. “Why not just kill all of us to put an end to this war?” he added.
Nekbakht, 18, was one of the pupils killed while studying at the school on Saturday. Her brother Mukhtar, 20, said that the family lives close to the school and came rushing out when they heard a loud explosion — only to see another blast.
On Sunday the family buried Nekbakht near their house. “It was a tough day,” Mukhtar said. “We are fed up with this situation. Every day we face terrible incidents — especially we Hazara people.”
Another schoolgirl, 12-year-old Zahara, was also injured in her arm and head in the attack.
Her uncle, Sadeq Baqhere, who lives a few hundred meters from the school, said she was admitted to hospital for surgery and returned on Monday.
Baqhere described hospitals overwhelmed with hundreds of injured and dozens of killed patients. He said the family “totally blames the government” for not providing security for its people.
“Our enemies are stronger than before,” he said, adding that the situation would continue to deteriorate as foreign forces left the country.
Mukhtar believes the situation will get worse as US troops exit Afghanistan.
“We want everyone to enroll their children in schools, and show them that they cannot prevent us from education,” he said of the perpetrators.