BBC
A bomb blast in southern Afghanistan has killed at least 35 people and injured 20 more, three of them Nato soldiers, a police official says.
The blast, apparently targeting a Nato military convoy, took place in Spin Boldak town in Kandahar province, near the Pakistani border.
A bomber in Kandahar city on Sunday killed more than 100 people - the country's bloodiest attack since 2001.
Nato troops in Afghanistan have been battling a resurgent Taleban militia.
Fifteen international troops have been killed in Afghanistan this year, most of them from the US.
Some 40,000 soldiers from Nato countries are deployed in the country, where their tasks include aiding reconstruction, tackling opium cultivation and battling the Taleban.
Earlier on Monday, funerals were held in Kandahar for the victims of Sunday's suicide attack.
Weeping relatives buried the dead, many of them in graves dug next to each other.
Sunday's bombing - believed to be the bloodiest since the overthrow of the Taleban in 2001 - hit a crowd watching a dogfight near the city.
The dead included a local police chief who also led a tribal militia opposed to the Taleban.
Officials blamed the Islamist Taleban guerrillas but they have denied responsibility.
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