A series of bomb blasts in Afghanistan's Bamyan Province on Tuesday killed at least 14 people and injured 50 others.

It is the deadliest terrorist attack in the Shia-Hazara-majority province since the United States invaded Afghanistan 19 years ago to oust the Taliban.

Tariq Aryan, a spokesman for the Afghan Interior Ministry, confirmed that the majority of those killed and injured in the late-afternoon attacks in the central market of the provincial capital, Bamyan, were civilians, including children.

The governor of Bamyan province, Froghuddin Amiri, told VOA that most of the injured were in critical condition and that the death toll could rise.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

A Taliban spokesman immediately denied involvement in the attack, saying the Taliban condemned the attack on civilians.

The Taliban's refusal to accept responsibility for the attack has raised suspicions that it was carried out by ISIS. The terrorist group has generally claimed responsibility for bombings and other violent attacks against the Hazara community in the capital, Kabul.

The attack in Bamyan on Tuesday coincided with a meeting of donors to Afghanistan in Geneva on the same day, in which various countries agreed to provide financial assistance to the war-torn country. Was announced.