Two explosions heard in Kabul: AFP journalists

Two explosions were heard in central Kabul on Wednesday evening, AFP journalists said, with Afghanistan on edge after border clashes with Pakistan over the past week. (X/@chashmNews_)
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Updated 15 October 2025
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Two explosions heard in Kabul: AFP journalists

  • Mujahid said an oil tanker and a generator had exploded, sparking fires in the Afghan capital
  • Plumes of black smoke could be seen rising into the sky

KABUL: Two explosions were heard in central Kabul on Wednesday evening, AFP journalists said, with Afghanistan on edge after border clashes with Pakistan over the past week.
Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said an oil tanker and a generator had exploded, sparking fires in the Afghan capital.
Ambulances were moving through the streets, AFP correspondents saw, while Taliban security forces also cordoned off the city center.

Plumes of black smoke could be seen rising into the sky and the ground was littered with shattered glass from buildings damaged by the explosions, AFP journalists said.
Violence between Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan has flared since two explosions in Kabul last Thursday, and others outside the capital, which Taliban authorities blamed on Islamabad.
Those explosions triggered a series of border clashes in which dozens of soldiers and civilians were killed, according to officials on both sides of the frontier.
Islamabad has long accused Afghanistan of harboring militant groups led by the Pakistani Taliban Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP) on its soil, a claim Kabul denies.

 


Russia investigates care home deaths in new Siberian health scandal

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Russia investigates care home deaths in new Siberian health scandal

  • The state Investigative Committee said professional lapses by staff had contributed to a mass outbreak of a viral infection that led to 46 people being hospitalized
  • At least three people died as a result of the illness and six other deaths were under investigation

MOSCOW: A criminal investigation into patient deaths at a neuropsychiatric care home in Siberia has found that staff failed in their duties, Russian authorities said on Thursday, in the second health scandal to hit the region this month.
The state Investigative Committee, which probes serious crimes, said professional lapses by staff had contributed to a mass outbreak of a viral infection that led to 46 people being hospitalized. At least three people died as a result of the illness and six other deaths were under investigation.
The care home is just outside the city of Novokuznetsk, where ⁠the deaths of nine newborn babies in the space of nine days shortly after the New Year sparked outrage across Russia and spurred a criminal investigation into negligence.
In the latest case, the Investigative Committee said staff were being questioned, medical records had been seized and forensic tests were under way to determine the cause ⁠of the infection’s spread.
The investigation is into “sanitary violations resulting in the deaths of patients.”
The regional health ministry said earlier this month it had detected 46 cases of influenza type A among a sample of 128 residents of the care home, while two more people tested positive for pneumonia.
Those who died included a 21-year-old woman with cerebral palsy and a 19-year-old man, according to regional authorities.
Ilya Seredyuk, governor of the Kuzbass region of Siberia, called the news was devastating, and said a commission formed by the ⁠regional government had been working on site since January 24.
“Materials requiring review have been sent to law enforcement agencies,” he said.
Kuzbass is a heavily industrial region of about 2.6 million people that accounts for much of Russia’s coal production.
Average life expectancy there in 2023 was about 70.2 years, well below the national average of 73.1 and compared with an average of 81.5 in the European Union.
Official data released this month shows deaths from respiratory diseases among working-age people in Kuzbass rose between 2022 and 2024, while overall mortality rates were higher and fertility rates lower than federal averages.