An explosion tore through a Chinese-run restaurant in a hotel in a heavily guarded part of Afghanistan's capital on Monday, killing a Chinese national and six Afghans and injuring several others.
The restaurant was in the commercial Shahr-e-Naw neighbourhood of Kabul that includes office buildings, shopping complexes and embassies, police spokesperson Khalid Zadran said. The district is considered one of the safest in the city.
The Chinese noodle restaurant was jointly run by a Chinese national, Abdul Majid, his wife, and an Afghan partner, Abdul Jabbar Mahmood, and served the Chinese Muslim community, Zadran said.
One Chinese national, identified as Ayub, and six Afghans were killed in the blast, which occurred near the kitchen, while several others were injured, Zadran added.
"So far, we have received 20 people at our hospital," Dejan Panic, humanitarian group EMERGENCY’s Country Director in Afghanistan, said in a statement.
"Among the wounded are four women and a child ... Unfortunately, seven people were already dead on arrival."There was no immediate word on the cause of the explosion. Authorities said they were investigating.
The Taliban took control of war-torn Afghanistan in 2021 and said it would restore security, but bomb attacks have continued, many of them claimed by the local arm of the militant IS group.

Iran sends missiles into Israel, dismisses Trump's talk of negotiations as 'fake news'
Iran denies talks with US after Trump postpones strikes on power grid
Israeli minister calls for annexation of southern Lebanon
Kim Jong Un says North Korea’s nuclear status is irreversible, threatens South
Japan to start releasing oil from joint stockpiles by end-March, PM says
Death toll nearly doubles to 66 in Colombian military plane crash
Seven overhead power lines out of service due to falling debris in Kuwait
Airstrikes on Iraqi site kill 10 fighters including commander
