ADVERTISEMENT

Bomb kills Afghan election candidate, wounds seven: officials

The Taliban quickly claimed responsibility for the attack, which takes the number of candidates killed so far during the campaign season to at least 10.

Jabar Qahraman had been meeting with supporters in his campaign office in the southern province of Helmand -- a Taliban stronghold -- when the attack happened, provincial governor spokesman Omar Zhwak told AFP.

Another seven people were wounded in the blast in the provincial capital Lashkar Gah.

The bomb had been hidden under Qahraman's sofa, Zhwak said.

ADVERTISEMENT

"We have arrested several people in connection with the blast," he added.

Provincial police spokesman Salam Afghan confirmed the explosion had killed one person and wounded at least two.

Most of the 10 candidates who have died in the lead-up to the election were murdered in targeted killings.

Qahraman was the second candidate killed in Lashkar Gah this month, after Saleh Mohammad Asikzai was among eight people killed in a suicide attack last week.

That incident came a day after the Taliban warned candidates to withdraw from the parliamentary election, which the group has vowed to attack.

ADVERTISEMENT

Poll-related violence has increased ahead of the long-delayed vote, with hundreds of people killed or wounded in attacks across the country.

Qahraman, a former army general under the Communist regime in the 1980s, had long been in the Taliban's crosshairs.

President Ashraf Ghani sent Qahraman, a sitting MP, to Helmand as his special envoy in 2016 to help defeat the militant group. Qahraman later resigned.

Preparations for the ballot have been a shambles and with days to go, organisers are still struggling to distribute voting materials to more than 5,000 polling centres.

The election for parliament's lower house is seen as a dry run for the presidential vote scheduled for April and organisers have said it would not be delayed any further.

ADVERTISEMENT

It also is seen as a key milestone ahead of a UN meeting in Geneva in November, where Afghanistan will be under pressure to show progress on "democratic processes".

Almost nine million people have registered to vote, but observers expect far fewer to turn out due to the threat of militant attacks and expectations of widespread fraud.

More than 50,000 members of Afghanistan's already overstretched security forces are being deployed to protect polling centres on election day.

JOIN OUR PULSE COMMUNITY!

Unblock notifications in browser settings.
ADVERTISEMENT

Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or:

Email: eyewitness@pulse.ng

Recommended articles

Security, govt officials have turned banditry into business venture, Gov laments

Security, govt officials have turned banditry into business venture, Gov laments

Makinde signs monumental deal with Shell to build gas distribution network in Oyo

Makinde signs monumental deal with Shell to build gas distribution network in Oyo

Tinubu set to commission 3 critical gas infrastructure projects

Tinubu set to commission 3 critical gas infrastructure projects

You won't believe how many Lagosians were arrested in 1 year for crossing highways

You won't believe how many Lagosians were arrested in 1 year for crossing highways

Man caught trying to smuggle snakes on plane — it's not the first time

Man caught trying to smuggle snakes on plane — it's not the first time

Kwara public school wonderkid scores 95 in maths, 362 overall in UTME

Kwara public school wonderkid scores 95 in maths, 362 overall in UTME

70 plane passengers suffer diarrhea crisis during chaotic flight

70 plane passengers suffer diarrhea crisis during chaotic flight

Peter Obi sent a former Vice President’s son to beg me - Reno Omokri

Peter Obi sent a former Vice President’s son to beg me - Reno Omokri

Nigeria is first African country to acquire this device

Nigeria is first African country to acquire this device

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT