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Afghan security and media representatives gather at the scene of an explosion in Kabul on May 16, 2013. A suicide car bomb targeting foreign military vehicles exploded in the Afghan capital Kabul shortly after 8:00 am (0330 GMT), police said, confirming there were casualties. Image Credit: AFP

Kabul: A suicide car bomber attacked a Nato convoy in the Afghan capital on Thursday, killing at least six people in the explosion and wounding more than 30, police and hospital officials said.

Militant group, Hizb-e-Islami, claimed responsibility for the early morning attack. The powerful explosion rattled buildings on the other side of Kabul and sent a pillar of white smoke into the sky in the city’s east.

Nato spokesman Quenton Roehricht said the international alliance can “confirm an explosion occurred on a coalition convoy in Kabul this morning,” but provided no further details.

Kabul provincial police spokesman Hashmad Stanakzi said the suicide bomber attacked the convoy in a car packed with explosives. “The explosion was very big. It set the nearby buildings on fire,” Stanakzi said.

He said there were people killed and several were wounded but he could not immediately give exact numbers. “The casualty numbers are high and mostly civilian.”

Kabul Deputy Police Chief Daud Amin said it was difficult to immediately estimate the number of dead because the blast had shredded many of the victims.

“We saw two dead bodies of children on the ground,” Amin said. “But the rest of the bodies were scattered in pieces around.”

Two Kabul hospitals reported that at least six dead and 37 wounded were brought in from the scene, city hospitals chief Kabir Amiri said, adding that the toll could increase.

A spokesman for Hizb-e-Islami, Haroon Zarghoon, told The Associated Press that one of the movement’s operatives carried out the attack on what he described as two vehicles of American advisers. He claimed that most of the American advisers were killed and their vehicles destroyed, though neither Afghan nor coalition officials have confirmed any foreign casualties. Afghan insurgents often exaggerate the success of their attacks.

Hizb-e-Islami is headed by 65-year-old former warlord Gubuddin Hekmatyar, a former Afghan prime minister and one-time US ally who is now listed as a terrorist by Washington. The militia has thousands of fighters and followers across the country’s north and east.