The death toll in the May 31 bomb attack in the Afghan capital has risen to 150, President Ashraf Ghani said on Tuesday at the start of an international security conference in Kabul.
Mr. Ghani said the attack near the German embassy had not been aimed at a specific target but the whole of the diplomatic area in that part of the city.
The blast, caused by an explosives-laden sewage tanker, was one of the worst in Kabul’s recent history.
Afghan security forces have blamed the Haqqani Network, an al-Qaeda ally, for the tanker bombing, as well as a second deadly attack on a funeral ceremony on Saturday.
Islamist insurgents have been gaining ground in Afghanistan in recent years, but the government is trying to bring the largest such movement, the Taliban, to the peace table, the organizers of the conference told dpa.
In his speech, Mr. Ghani warned the Taliban that they would not succeed in bringing down the government, and said that the aim of the so-called Kabul Process was to ensure peace with support from neighbouring countries and the international community.
Also on the agenda are joint regional initiatives against terrorist organisations active in Afghanistan, such as al-Qaeda and Islamic State.
On Monday, President Ghani also appointed a former vice president, the Hazara politician Mohammad Khalili as the new head of the country’s High Peace Council.
The current international force in Afghanistan numbers about 13,000, about 8,400 of them are American, mostly tasked with training and advising the Afghan forces.
The Trump administration and military commanders are debating whether to send up to 5,000 more troops to stem the government’s losses.
(dpa/NAN)