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Afghan officials: Separate blasts in Kabul kill 3, wound 4

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Afghan officials: Separate blasts in Kabul kill 3, wound 4
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News

Afghan officials: Separate blasts in Kabul kill 3, wound 4

2021-02-06 19:01 Last Updated At:19:10

Two separate explosions rocked the Afghan capital of Kabul on Saturday, killing at least three people including members of the minority Sikh community and wounding four others, Afghan officials said.

The first explosion hit a store in the heart of the capital, causing it to collapse and kill at least two Sikhs, according to two Afghan police officials. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the media.

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Afghan security personnel inspect the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

Two separate explosions rocked the Afghan capital of Kabul on Saturday, killing at least three people including members of the minority Sikh community and wounding four others, Afghan officials said.

An Afghan security personnel inspects the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

Kabul police spokesman Ferdaws Faramarz said six people were wounded in the blast in the store and no one was killed. He said police were investigating what caused the explosion. The discrepancy between the two numbers could not immediately be accounted for.

Afghan security personnel inspect the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials.  (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

With growing threats from IS, Afghanistan’s once-thriving community of Sikhs and Hindus has dwindled from as many as 250,000 members to fewer than 700.

Afghan security personnel inspect the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

Afghan security personnel inspect the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

Afghan security personnel stand guard near the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

Afghan security personnel stand guard near the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the blast, but the Islamic State group has targeted Sikhs and other minority communities in Afghanistan. A nationwide spike in bombings, targeted killings and violence on the battlefield comes as peace negotiations in Qatar between the Taliban and the Afghan government have stalled.

Afghan security personnel inspect the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

Afghan security personnel inspect the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

Kabul police spokesman Ferdaws Faramarz said six people were wounded in the blast in the store and no one was killed. He said police were investigating what caused the explosion. The discrepancy between the two numbers could not immediately be accounted for.

In Saturday's second explosion, Faramarz said a sticky bomb was attached to a police car and went off in northern Kabul, killing a police officer.

Tensions in Afghanistan are high amid a string of targeted killings. Some are claimed by the local Islamic State affiliate, but many go unclaimed, blamed by the government on the Taliban who have denied responsibility for most attacks.

An Afghan security personnel inspects the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

An Afghan security personnel inspects the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

With growing threats from IS, Afghanistan’s once-thriving community of Sikhs and Hindus has dwindled from as many as 250,000 members to fewer than 700.

IS claimed responsibility for an attack last March in which a gunman rampaged through a Sikh house of worship in the heart of Kabul, killing 25 worshippers and wounding eight.

IS claimed it carried out 82 attacks in Afghanistan in 2020, killing or wounding 821 people, including 21 assassinations. Most of the victims in its attacks were either security personnel or Shiite Muslims. However, the perpetrators of many targeted killings are unknown.

Afghan security personnel inspect the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials.  (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

Afghan security personnel inspect the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

Afghan security personnel inspect the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

Afghan security personnel inspect the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

Afghan security personnel stand guard near the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

Afghan security personnel stand guard near the site of a bomb attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Feb. 6, 2021. There were two separate explosions Saturday in Afghanistan capital Kabul, according to Afghan officials. (AP PhotoRahmat Gul)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Lawyers for an American believed to be held by the Taliban for nearly two years are asking a United Nations human rights investigator to intervene, citing what they say is cruel and inhumane treatment.

Ryan Corbett was abducted Aug. 10, 2022, after returning to Afghanistan, where he and his family had been living at the time of the collapse of the U.S.-based government there a year earlier. He arrived on a valid 12-month visa to pay and train staff as part of a business venture he led aimed at promoting Afghanistan's private sector through consulting services and lending.

Corbett has since been shuttled between multiple prisons, though his lawyers say he has not been seen since last December by anyone other than the people with whom he was detained.

In a petition sent Thursday, lawyers for Corbett say that he's been threatened with physical violence and torture and has been malnourished and deprived of medical care. He's been held in solitary confinement, including in a basement cell with almost no sunlight and exercise, and his physical and mental health have significantly deteriorated, the lawyers say.

Corbett has been able to speak with his family by phone five times since his arrest, including last month. His family has not been able to see him — his only visits have been two check-ins from a third-party government — and their characterizations of his mistreatment are based on accounts from recently released prisoners who were with him and his openly dispirited tone in conversations.

“During Mr. Corbett’s most recent call with his wife and children, Mr. Corbett indicated that the mental torture and anguish have caused him to lose all hope,” said the petition, signed by the Corbett family attorneys, Ryan Fayhee and Kate Gibson.

The petition is addressed to Alice Edwards, an independent human rights investigator and the special rapporteur for torture in the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights at the U.N. It asks Edwards, who was appointed by the U.N. Human Rights Council, to “urgently reach out to the Taliban to secure Mr. Corbett’s immediate release and freedom from torture, as guaranteed by international law.”

"This situation is just dragging on, and I’m increasingly concerned and taking steps that I hope will make a difference and help the situation — just increasingly concerned and panicking about Ryan’s deteriorating health and physical and mental health," Corbett's wife, Anna, said in an interview. “And that was leading me to take this next step.”

The U.S. government is separately working to get Corbett home and has designated him as wrongfully detained. A State Department spokesman told reporters last month that officials had continually pressed for Corbett's release and were “using every lever we can to try to bring Ryan and these other wrongfully detained Americans home from Afghanistan."

A spokesperson for the Interior Ministry in Afghanistan said this week that it had no knowledge of Corbett's case.

Corbett, of Dansville, New York, first visited Afghanistan in 2006 and relocated there with his family in 2010, supervising several non-governmental organizations.

The family was forced to leave Afghanistan in August 2021 when the Taliban captured Kabul, but he returned the following January so that he could renew his business visa. Given the instability on the ground, the family discussed the trip and “we were all pretty nervous,” Corbett's wife said.

But after that first uneventful trip, he returned to the country in August 2022 to train and pay his staff and resume a business venture that involved consulting services, microfinance lending and evaluating international development projects.

While on a trip to the northern Jawzjan province, Corbett and a Western colleague were confronted by armed members of the Taliban and were taken first to a police station and later to an underground prison.

Anna Corbett said that when she learned her husband had been taken to a police station, she got “really scared” but that he was optimistic the situation would be quickly resolved.

That, however, did not happen, and Anna Corbett, who has three teenage children and makes regular trips to Washington, said she's trying to advocate as forcefully as she can while not letting “anxiety take over.”

“I feel like it’s the uncertainty of all of it that just is so difficult because you just don’t know what’s going to come at you — what call, what news," she said. "And I’m worried about Ryan and the effect of the trauma on him and then also on my kids, just what they’re experiencing. I've tried to protect them the best I could, but this is so difficult.”

Associated Press writer Riazat Butt in Kabul, Afghanistan, contributed to this report.

This family photo shows Ryan Corbett holding rabbits with his daughter Miriam and son Caleb in Kabul, Afghanistan in 2020. Lawyers for Corbett, believed held by the Taliban for nearly two years, are asking a United Nations human rights investigator to intervene, citing what they say is cruel and inhumane treatment. Corbett was abducted on August 10, 2022 after returning to Afghanistan, where he and his family had been living at the time of the collapse of the U.S.-based government there one year earlier, on a valid 12-month business visa to pay and train staff. (AP Photo/Anna Corbett)

This family photo shows Ryan Corbett holding rabbits with his daughter Miriam and son Caleb in Kabul, Afghanistan in 2020. Lawyers for Corbett, believed held by the Taliban for nearly two years, are asking a United Nations human rights investigator to intervene, citing what they say is cruel and inhumane treatment. Corbett was abducted on August 10, 2022 after returning to Afghanistan, where he and his family had been living at the time of the collapse of the U.S.-based government there one year earlier, on a valid 12-month business visa to pay and train staff. (AP Photo/Anna Corbett)

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