Taliban supporters and senior figures held their first mass rally near Kabul yesterday, but the show of strength was overshadowed by a bomb blast targeting mourners inside the Afghan capital.
No foreign government has yet recognised the Islamist former rebels’ rule, though their hold on power within the country is becoming stronger, seven weeks after they took Kabul.
However, in a sign that the Taliban victory has not brought an end to violence after Afghanistan’s 20-year conflict, an explosion killed at least five and wounded several more outside Kabul’s Eid Gah mosque.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid had said on Saturday that a prayer ceremony would be held at the mosque for his mother following her recent death.
He made no reference to this yesterday as he tweeted that the blast had killed several civilians in the area.
People in bloodied clothing were seen by AFP arriving at the nearby Kabul Emergency Hospital.
A cultural commission official, who asked not to be named, told AFP that five people died and 11 were wounded, adding that the casualties included both civilians and Taliban members.
“We have also arrested three people in connection with the blast,” he said.
According to the official, the explosive device was placed at the entrance to the mosque and detonated as mourners were leaving after offering condolences to Mujahid and his family.
Taliban fighters arriving at the hospital handed over their weapons and stripped off their body armour to go in to donate blood, and the hospital said on Twitter that four patients were being treated.
The blast, which could be heard across the centre of the capital, came shortly after the new Taliban “interim government” staged a rally in Kohdaman township in the hilly outskirts of Kabul.
“This is the day we waited for,” said Khalil Haqqani, the new minister for refugees, who in 2011 was labelled a terrorist by the United States with a $5mn bounty on his head.
He is a prominent leader of the Haqqani militant network founded by his brother Jalaluddin.
“We have achieved our goal, but it requires protection,” he told the gathering, with his rifle leaning against the lectern. “My advice to the world is that they leave Afghanistan to Afghanistan.”
Flanked by armed Taliban fighters in combat gear, leading officials and commanders addressed an audience sat in rows of chairs under awnings, celebrating victory over the United States and praising suicide bombers.
The United States, European nations and other powers that were major donors to the former Afghan government before the Taliban takeover have warned they will not recognise the new administration – made up largely of hardliners and no women – unless it becomes more inclusive.
Afghanistan’s neighbour Pakistan has urged the world to engage with the Taliban, while stopping short of itself recognising the new regime.
US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, who will be in Islamabad next week, has pressed for an inclusive government in Kabul, and said that Washington looks to “Pakistan to play a critical role in enabling that outcome”.

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