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Nepal explosions kill four in capital Kathmandu | |
(about 5 hours later) | |
At least four people died and seven others were injured in three explosions in the Nepali capital, Kathmandu, officials say. | |
The three blasts - one in the centre and two on the outskirts - took place on Sunday afternoon local time. | |
Improvised or crude explosive devices are believed to have been used to set off the blasts, police said. | |
One official told reporters a Maoist splinter group was under suspicion after pamphlets were found nearby. | |
The same group is alleged to have carried out an explosion in February which killed one person in Kathmandu. | |
However, no one has claimed responsibilities for the attacks. | |
Police official Shyam Lal Gyawali said three of those killed died "on the spot", while the fourth died in hospital. | |
The pamphlets were found at a home on the outskirts of the city, where the first blast took place, he added. | |
Student Govinda Bhandari, 17, told Reuters news agency: "I heard a big noise and rushed to the spot to find the walls of a house had developed cracks due to the impact of the blast." | |
Just one person died in the initial explosion, while three died in a second incident near a hairdressers in the city centre. | |
The third blast happened several hours later and is reported to have injured two members of the group transporting an explosive device. | |
Security forces have sealed off the locations of the blasts and say investigations are under way. | |
Since a decade-long civil war ended in 2006, Nepal has been relatively peaceful, with the main group of the former rebels joining the ruling government party the next year. | |
However, some have now broken away, saying their leaders are betraying their original revolutionary ideals. |