Car bomb outside Kabul hospital kills three

A car bomb exploded Saturday in the Afghan capitol, after news broke that Taliban leader Mullah Omar had died.

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REUTERS/Mohammad Ismail
An Afghan man talks on his phone from a damaged building after a blast in Kabul, Afghanistan August 22, 2015. A car bomb outside a Kabul hospital killed at least 10 people and caused widespread casualties among Afghan civilians, although it appeared to have targeted a vehicle carrying foreign citizens, witnesses and security sources said.

A car bomb exploded outside a hospital in Kabul on Saturday, killing three people and injuring 27, a health official said, as a wave of attacks hit the capital after the news broke of the death of Taliban leader Mullah Omar.

The target appeared to be a vehicle carrying a foreign citizen, a security source and witness said.

Paramedics carried the wounded away in a street littered with broken glass and mangled cars after the blast, a Reuters witness said.

"We have received three dead bodies," said senior Kabul health official Kabir Amiry. "There could be more casualties."

At least 27 people were injured, the health ministry spokesman said.

Bombings have increased in the capital since the government and Taliban in July confirmed Mullah Omar had died two years ago. Some analysts say the insurgents are trying to show they remain potent.

Saturday's bomb was placed in a Toyota sedan, a security official at the scene said. Flames billowed from the car and parts of it were ripped apart by the blast and scattered along the street.

Glass was blown out of the windows of the Shinozada hospital and a six-story building opposite. On its website, the Shinozada is described as Afghanistan's first private hospital.

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