Kabul: Militants linked to Daesh abducted and killed around 30 civilians, including children, in central Afghanistan, officials said on Wednesday, raising concerns about the group’s expanding presence beyond its eastern stronghold.

The killings occurred late on Tuesday north of Firoz Koh, the capital of Ghor province, with the local government calling it a revenge attack after a local Daesh commander was gunned down.

Daesh has so far not officially claimed responsibility for the attack.

“Our security forces with the help of locals conducted an operation and killed a Daesh commander yesterday. Daesh fighters in return abducted around 30 villagers, mostly shepherds,” Ghor Governor Nasir Khazeh told journalists.

“Their dead bodies were found by local people this morning.”

Abdul Hamid Nateqi, a Ghor provincial council member, gave a similar account to journalists, adding that the assailants were Taliban renegades who had sworn allegiance to Daesh.

The killings underscore Afghanistan’s unravelling security situation as the resurgent Taliban continue a push into urban centres 15 years after they were toppled from power.

Daesh fighters have been trying to expand their presence in Afghanistan, winning over sympathisers, recruiting followers and challenging the Taliban on their own turf, primarily in the country’s east.

In March Afghan President Ashraf Gani announced that the militants had been defeated after local security forces claimed victory in a months-long operation against the group.

But Daesh militants have continued to launch deadly strikes in the country.

The latest devastating attack in Ghor represents a major escalation for Daesh, which has so far largely been confined to the eastern province of Nangarhar where it is notorious for brutality including beheadings.

“[Daesh] announces its emergence in Ghor by murdering dozens of civilians,” said Borhan Osman, a researcher with the Afghanistan Analysts Network in Kabul.

Osman added that the Daesh in Ghor comprised mainly former Taliban fighters.

The Afghan government is currently in the middle of an operation, backed by Nato airstrikes, against Daesh in the province.

Nato recently said the group’s influence was waning as it steadily lost territory, with fighters largely confined to two or three districts in Nangarhar from around nine in January.

“Right now we see them [Daesh] very focused on trying to establish their caliphate... inside Afghanistan,” John Nicholson, the top US and Nato commander in the country, told reporters on Sunday.

“Of course with our Afghan partners we have been able to reduce that territory significantly and inflict heavy casualties on them.”

In July, Daesh militants claimed responsibility for twin explosions that ripped through crowds of Shiite Hazaras in Kabul, killing at least 85 people and wounding more than 400 others.

The bombings marked the deadliest single attack in Kabul since the Taliban were ousted from power in a 2001 US-led invasion. The killings sparked an avalanche of global condemnation, with the United Nations labelling the direct assault on civilians a “war crime”.

The Taliban, who are in the middle of their annual summer offensive and are more powerful than Daesh, denied any involvement in the Ghor killings.

The militant group, which has stepped up nationwide assaults on the Western-backed government, is known to distance itself from attacks that result in large civilian casualties.