Three large explosions tore through a Shi'ite mosque in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar during Friday prayers, killing at least 42 people and wounding over 70, with the casualty toll likely to rise, officials said.
Taliban interior ministry spokesman Qari Saeed Khosti said authorities were collecting details of the explosion, which took place days after a suicide bomb attack claimed by Daesh on a Shi'ite mosque in the northern city of Kunduz that killed scores of people.
An eyewitness told reporters he heard three explosions, one at the main door of the mosque, another at a southern area, and a third where worshippers wash before their prayers.
Photographs and mobile phone footage posted by journalists on social media showed many people apparently dead or seriously wounded on the bloody floor of the Imam Bargah mosque.
A health official said 42 dead and 70 wounded had been brought to the city's Mirwais hospital but the total was expected to rise, with ambulances still bringing victims in.
Taliban special forces arrived to secure the site and an appeal went out to residents to donate blood for the wounded.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
The blast, coming so soon after the Kunduz attack underlined the increasingly uncertain security in Afghanistan as the Taliban grapple with an escalating economic and humanitarian crisis that threatens millions with hunger.
The local affiliate of Daesh, known as Khorasan, after an ancient name for the region covering Afghanistan, has stepped up attacks following the Taliban victory over the Western-backed government in Kabul in August.
Taliban officials have played down the threat from Daesh but the repeated attacks have tarnished its claim to have brought peace to Afghanistan after four decades of war.
The fact that the Shi'ite minority has again been targeted may also inflame tensions among different ethnic and sectarian groups in the largely Sunni country.