A car bomb
exploded outside a bank in Lashkar Gah, capital of the southern Afghan province
of Helmand on Thursday, killing and wounding dozens of civilians and
members of
the security forces waiting to collect their pay, officials said.
Omar Zwak,
spokesman for the provincial governor, said at least 20 people had been killed
and more than 50 wounded, including members of the police and army, civilians
and staff of the New Kabul Bank branch where the attack took place.
There was no
immediate claim of responsibility for the attack but insurgent groups,
including the Taliban, have in the past targeted banks where police, soldiers
and other government employees collect their pay.
The incident
is the latest in a series that has underlined a steadily worsening security
situation across Afghanistan, almost three years after international troops
ended their main combat mission in 2014.
Emergency
workers and passers-by tried to help the injured, who were strewn among the
dead. Ambulances and private cars ferried the victims to hospitals.
The blast
came as Afghans were preparing to celebrate next week's Eid al-Fitr festival
marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan.
While
high-profile attacks in the capital, Kabul, have drawn headlines, there have
been dozens of similar incidents in provincial centers across Afghanistan over
recent months.
Helmand, one
of the world's major centers of opium growing, and a traditional heartland of
the Taliban, has been under particularly heavy pressure with large parts of the
province in the hands of the insurgents.

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