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Multiple Explosions Hit Polling Stations Across Afghanistan

© REUTERS / JAWED TANVEERThis picture taken on January 10, 2017 shows Afghan policemen standing guard at the site of an explosion near the governor's compound in Kandahar
This picture taken on January 10, 2017 shows Afghan policemen standing guard at the site of an explosion near the governor's compound in Kandahar - Sputnik International
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Elections in Afghanistan kicked off this morning, with the government dispatching 72,000 security officers to protect voters amid threats from the Taliban movement.

According to Reuters, citing a local government official, three people were injured in a blast near a polling station in Kandahar mere hours after the start of presidential elections. In the meantime, AFP reported, citing a hospital official, that the explosion wounded 15 people.

As of now, no organisation has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Soon after the incident, a separate blast hit a polling centre in the Afghan capital of Kabul. No casualties were reported, but authorities have stopped voting to secure the area. At the same time, another bomb attack killed one person and injured two others at a polling station in Amarkhil high school in Nangarhar Province

© REUTERS / OMAR SOBHANIDamaged cars are seen at the site of a suicide attack in Kabul, Afghanistan September 5, 2019
Multiple Explosions Hit Polling Stations Across Afghanistan - Sputnik International
Damaged cars are seen at the site of a suicide attack in Kabul, Afghanistan September 5, 2019

Commenting on the situation, Kandahar Governor spokesman Ahmad Baheer Ahmadi said that "31 bombs were discovered and [subsequently] destroyed" across the province a day before.

Earlier in the day, 4,900 our of 7,000 selected polling stations opened across the country for around 9.5 million voters, who had registered to cast their ballots.

These are the fourth official presidential elections held in the war-torn country amid the standoff between the government in Kabul and the Taliban militants. The Taliban movement was previously engaged in peace talks with US officials, but in September US President Donald Trump announced that the negotiations were "dead".

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