Afghanistan: Kabul voter centre suicide attack kills 57
Eight-year-old Zahra is among those being treated in hospital
A suicide bomb attack at a voter registration centre in the Afghan capital Kabul has killed at least 57 people, officials say.
The dead include 21 women and five children, killed when the blast hit the queue outside. A further 119 people were injured.
The Islamic State group (IS) said it had carried out the attack.
Voter registration began this month for legislative elections which are due to take place in October.
IS's mouthpiece said a suicide bomber wearing an explosive belt had targeted the centre, which is in the Dashte Barchi area of western Kabul.
Militants are trying to sow chaos, minister says
How successful has IS been in Afghanistan?
Afghan president: This is the worst job on earth
What happened on Sunday?
Dashte Barchi is heavily populated by members of Afghanistan's Shia Muslim minority, who have been targeted by IS for their religion in the past.
Relatives of victims grieved outside a hospital
Children were standing in line with their parents waiting to register when the bomb went off on Sunday morning.
There were no immediate details of how the bomb was detonated by the attacker but the force of the blast also destroyed cars.
"I found myself covered in blood, with dead people - women and children - around me," Rasuli, 26, recalled when he spoke to AFP news agency from his hospital bed in the city.
Why are voters being targeted?
There have already been at least four attacks on such centres since voter registration got under way a week ago.
Clothes and sandals littered the site of the attack
The legislative elections later this year will be followed by a presidential poll in 2019.
BBC research earlier this year found that the Afghan government had full control over just 30% of the country, with the rest of the country under significant threat from the Taliban, and, to a lesser extent, IS.
Afghanistan's interior minister told the BBC earlier this year that both IS and the Taliban were targeting civilians to provoke people against the government and create chaos.
Sunday's attack was Kabul's deadliest since at least 100 people were killed in a district full of government buildings and embassies in January.
Presentational grey line
Recent major attacks in Afghanistan
23 March: A car bomb in Helmand province kills at least 13 spectators at a wrestling match
21 March: A suspected IS suicide bomb attack near a shrine in Kabul kills at least 31 people celebrating Persian New Year
10 March: A Taliban attack in the western province of Farah kills 24 soldiers
27 January: Taliban militants drive an ambulance laden with explosives into a Kabul secure zone, killing at least 100
20 January: Taliban gunmen kill at least 22 people at a major Kabul hotel
collected from
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-43855884