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The terrifying power of the bomb which ripped through Kabul yesterday morning has been revealed as the city's mayor said it damaged buildings up to two miles away.
Images from the site of the blast show it created a hole at least 15ft across and 10ft deep as mayor Abdullah Habibzai said the destruction will cost at least $1.5million to clean up.
At least 90 people, mostly civilians, died after a sewage tanker packed with explosives detonated in the heavily-policed diplomatic district on Wednesday morning, leaving another 450 injured.
Dramatic footage of the moment the bomb went off has also emerged, showing a huge shockwave sweeping out from the blast, causing heavy damage to everything in its path and sending people scrambling for safety.
Witnesses said the blast, which happened during the rush hour, felt 'like an earthquake' - sending a mushroom cloud into the sky and creating a hole 15ft wide and at least 10ft deep.
Included in the dead was BBC driver Mohammed Nazir, while four of their journalists were also injured. Another 11 American contractors were also hurt, along with staff from the German, Japanese and Pakistani embassies.
Dozens of Afghan families were still searching for their missing relatives on Thursday, while hospital were forced to lay bodies outside the morgue because they had run out of space.
Some were so badly damaged in the blast that they are unrecognisable, morgue staff said.
No group has so far stepped forward to claim responsibility for the attack, though Afghanistan did cancel a cricket match against neighbouring Pakistan in the wake of the attack.
Both countries routinely accuse each other of not doing enough to tackle terrorists on their side of the border.
Pakistani President Mamnoon Hussain said on Thursday that he condemns the attack, adding that Pakistanis are saddened at the loss of life during Ramadan.
He added that the people and the government of Pakistan will continue to support all efforts aimed at ensuring peace in Afghanistan.
Afghan Ambassador to Islamabad, Omar Zakhilwal, vowed in a tweet that Wednesday's 'heinous and cowardly crime will fail to break the spirit and morale of our nation.'
He added: 'A day of fasting, worship and joy was turned into a bloody day of mourning.'