By Sudarsan Raghavan-April 2 at 9:38 AM
KABUL — A
suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowd of protesters in the eastern
Afghanistan province of Khost on Thursday, killing 18 and wounding
scores more, Afghan government officials said.
The assault unfolded around 10 a.m. as the demonstrators gathered to
protest the policies of the province’s governor, said Mobarez Zadran, a
spokesman for the governor’s office. The bomber, Zadran said, waded into
the gathering and detonated his explosives.
Among the wounded was a prominent Afghan lawmaker, Humayoon Humayoon,
who was one the event’s organizers. The protests had been going on for
several days.
In a tweet, President Ashraf Ghani’s office condemned the attack,
describing it as “an unforgivable crime against innocent civilians.”
[New Afghan leader welcomed on Capitol Hill]
Afghan firefighters try to extinguish fire at the site of a suicide bomb blast in the Khost province on Thursday. (Ahmadullah Ahmadi/European Pressphoto Agency)

Afghan firefighters try to extinguish fire at the site of a suicide bomb blast in the Khost province on Thursday. (Ahmadullah Ahmadi/European Pressphoto Agency)

While suspicion immediately fell on the Taliban, its spokesman
Zabihullah Mujahid denied responsibility for the attack, also in a
tweet.
Thursday’s attack was the latest sign that violence is escalating again
after a nearly three-month winter lull, traditionally a period when the
war subsides. Last week, a suicide bomber killed seven and
wounded 36, striking close to the presidential palace and finance
ministry in the Afghan capital. Prior to that, another suicide bomber
killed a powerful regional police commander in the capital.
Thursday’s bombing was the first major assault since Ghani, and his chief executive Abdullah Abdullah, returned from a visit to meet President Obama and
other officials in Washington and New York. Ghani secured a commitment
from President Obama to slow the planned exit of 9,800 U.S. troops from
Afghanistan amid concerns that the Taliban and other militants could
launch heavy offensives during the spring and summer.
As most U.S. and international forces have left, casualties have mounted
for Afghanistan security forces, which are struggling against a still
potent Taliban, with last year being the worst on record. More than 10,000 Afghan civilians also died or were injured in the conflict last year, the largest number since the United Nations started keeping records in the country.
Mohammad Sharif contributed to this story.