Attackers set off a truck bomb in Afghanistan's eastern Nangarhar province on Saturday, killing at least 15 people and wounding dozens.
Attaullah Khugyani, a spokesman for the provincial government, said the number of casualties, most of whom were civilians, could rise and that dozens of people were also injured by the blast in Ghani Khel district.
Obaidullah Shinwari, the Nangarhar provincial council's member, said 52 people were injured in the blast.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.
Ministry of Interior spokesman Tariq Arian blamed the insurgent Taliban for the attack, saying in the last two weeks they had carried 650 attacks which had killed 69 civilians and wounded 141 people.
The Taliban did not immediately respond to calls requesting comment. Afghan government negotiators are holding talks with the insurgent Taliban in attempts to end decades of conflict, but calls by the government and international community for a ceasefire or reduction in violence have so far been rejected by the Taliban.
Violence has escalated since a reduction in violence period that led up to the United States signing a troop withdrawal with the group, designed to usher the way to peace negotiations, in February.
The Ministry of Interior also said in a Tweet that Afghan forces had killed a key member of the Taliban and arrested five others on Friday night in northern Balkh province.


US expected to send thousands of soldiers to Middle East
US safety agency says tracking system failed at LaGuardia during jet collision
Russia fires record 948 drones against Ukraine over 24 hours, Kyiv says
Death toll rises to 69 in Colombian military plane crash
One killed, five injured in Bahrain from Iran strikes
Qatar is not directly mediating between US and Iran, ministry spokesperson says
Germany, France in rare rebuke of Trump over Iran war
Philippine president declares energy emergency over Middle East conflict risks
