Kabul:
"They killed everyone, no one is left alive," Apar Singh sums up the horrific attack carried out by a lone terrorist on a prominent Sikh gurdwara in Afghanistan' Kabul that killed at least 25 people.
Over two-dozen people were killed and eight others were injured when a heavily armed suicide bomber stormed a prominent gurdwara on Wednesday in the heart of Afghanistan's Kabul, in one of the deadliest attacks on the minority Sikh community.
Some of the Afghan Sikhs, who lost their entire family in the attack, are wondering what "sin" they have committed to deserve such a fate, TOLO news reported.
Recalling the attack, one man, who lost seven members of his family in the attack, said that the suicide bomber fired at a man, woman and a child and "showed no mercy to anyone."
One of the men, who lost his mother in the attack, asked: "what was my mother's sin and why are the country's minorities being targeted like this?".
"Come and slaughter us if we harmed any Muslim," said one of the victim's relatives.
"What is our sin? Come and tell us about our sins. If we have done anything to Muslims?" asked other relatives of the victims.
Harwinder Singh, who lost all seven members of his family, said the attackers killed all his family members in front of his eyes.
"They (attackers) killed my mother and my wife with my small child with bullets in front of my eyes," Mr Singh said.
"They killed everyone, no one is left alive," said Apar Singh, another victim.
A woman, who has been transferred to the hospital for treatment after she was wounded, said there was no news of her family members who had come for prayer.
"All of our youths were killed, what should we do with the children that are left from the attack?" asked a wounded person.
The brutal attack on the minority Sikh community has sparked anger among Afghan residents.
"The attack showed that they (attackers) don't have any mercy on anyone and they are not obeying any law nor any religion," said Mohammad Mustafa, a resident of Kabul.
"They don't care about Muslims nor Hindus, it means humanity does not have any meaning for them," said Haroon Rasouly, another resident of Kabul.
The attack has faced severe condemnation from both inside and outside the country.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Wednesday that he was "saddened" by the attack on the gurdwara when 150 worshippers were inside the building.
"I am saddened by today's terror attack at Gurudwara in Kabul. I express my condolences to the families of all the deceased," he said in a tweet.
The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) also condemned the attack that lasted for about six hours, terming it cowardly and reflective of a "diabolical mindset".
"Such cowardly attacks on places of religious worship of the minority community, especially at this time of the COVID-19 pandemic, is reflective of the diabolical mindset of the perpetrators and their backers," it said in a statement.
Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani condemned the attack, saying: "The attack on the religious sites shows the extreme weakness of the enemy, religious sites should not be vulnerable to attacks and violence."
India's Ambassador to Afghanistan Vinay Kumar on Thursday visited the gurdwara and offered condolences to families of the victims of the horrific attack.
Islamist militants have targeted sikhs a number of times in Afghanistan.
In July 2018, ISIS terrorists bombed a gathering of Sikhs and Hindus in the eastern city of Jalalabad, killing 19 people and injuring 20.
Awtar Singh Khalsa, one of the country's best-known Sikh politicians then, was among those killed in the attack.