Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s powerful cousin, a close ally of presidential candidate Ashraf Ghani, was killed in a suicide bomb attack yesterday, officials said, deepening strains over an election marred by fraud and under a UN-monitored review.

Hashmat Karzai was hosting an event for the Eid al-Fitr holiday at his home in the southern province of Kandahar, the cradle of the Taliban insurgency, when a man posing as a guest and described as well-dressed set off explosives, the local governor’s office said. No one else was killed in the attack.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

The motives for the assassination were not immediately clear, but the killing deals another setback to hopes that the deadlock over the electoral contest to replace Karzai as president will be quickly resolved.

A new president was initially due to be sworn in on Saturday, but Western diplomats say it could take weeks, possibly months, before a new leader officially takes office. The delays have fuelled security concerns and uncertainty now hangs over a deal to keep US troops in the country beyond the end of the year.

Sources have expressed anxiety about continued bickering between Ghani and his rival Abdullah Abdullah despite a US-brokered agreement this month to put aside their differences for the sake of national peace.

US Secretary of State John Kerry, who visited Kabul this month, will probably have to make a follow-up visit to cajole Ghani, the winner according to provincial results, and Abdullah into forming a unity government, US officials say.

US President Barack Obama has also urged the two Afghan candidates to iron out their differences.

An influential power broker in Kandahar province, Hashmat Karzai lived in the family’s hometown and famously kept a pet lion and other exotic animals at his villa.

His early support for Ghani ahead of the first round of the election drew attention to deep tribal divisions emerging in the Pashtun south and to an ongoing feud between Hashmat Karzai and his cousin, the President.

Hashmat’s influence in the province, a stronghold of the Pashtun ethnic majority, grew after the 2011 murder of another powerful relative, the President’s half-brother Ahmed Wali.

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