Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Eyewitness Sabira Jan: "I saw many people killed"

So-called Islamic State has said it was behind an attack on a protest march in the Afghan capital, Kabul, that killed 80 people and wounded 230.

The IS-linked Amaq news agency said two fighters "detonated explosive belts at a gathering of Shia" in Kabul.

The attack in Deh Mazang square targeted thousands from the Shia Hazara minority who were protesting over a new power line, saying its route bypasses provinces where many of them live.

The Taliban have condemned the attack.

Spokesperson Zabiullah Mujaheed sent an e-mail to the media saying they were not behind it.

Self-styled IS has a presence in eastern Afghanistan but has not previously admitted carrying out assaults in the capital.

Image copyright AP Image caption The attack targeted the Hazara minority who have often complained of discrimination

Image copyright AFP Image caption The Kabul protest had drawn thousands from the mostly Shia Hazara community

An Afghan intelligence source told the BBC that an IS commander named Abo Ali had sent three jihadists from the Achen district of Nangarhar province to carry out the Kabul attack.

The interior ministry said only one attacker had successfully detonated an explosives belt. The belt of the second failed to explode and the third attacker was killed by security forces.

'Death to discrimination'

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani addressed the nation on TV, declaring Sunday a day of national mourning.

"I promise you I will take revenge against the culprits," he said.

He had earlier issued a statement saying: "Peaceful protest is the right of every citizen, but opportunist terrorists infiltrated the crowds and carried out the attack."

What is behind the power line protest?

Islamic State group: The full story

Image copyright EPA Image caption The Hazaras - mostly Shia Muslims - make up the third largest group in Afghanistan

Image copyright AFP Image caption There was a large police presence for the march

A freelance journalist working for BBC Afghan said blood and body parts were everywhere, with debris strewn around.

A large part of Kabul's city centre had been sealed off for the protest march.

The demonstrators had waved banners and chanted "death to discrimination", angry that the 500kV power transmission line from Turkmenistan to Kabul would not pass through Bamyan and Wardak provinces, which have large Hazara populations.

The Hazaras - mostly Shia Muslims - live mainly in the centre of the country.

They complain of persistent discrimination, especially during Taliban rule in the late 1990s, when many of them fled to Pakistan, Iran and Tajikistan.

Who are the Hazaras?

Of Mongolian and Central Asian descent

Mainly practise Shia Islam, in predominantly Sunni Afghanistan and Pakistan

Thought to be the third largest ethnic group in Afghanistan

Estimates suggest they make up 15-20% of Afghanistan's population, which is thought to be about 30 million

At least 600,000 Hazaras live in Pakistan, most of them in Quetta

Legend has it they are descendants of Genghis Khan and his soldiers, who invaded Afghanistan in the 13th Century

War of the militants

Image caption There have been serious clashes between Afghan militants allied with Islamic State and Taliban fighters

The Taliban and Islamic State have been locked in frequent battles in Afghanistan since January 2015.

The Taliban's dominance in a region home to numerous local and foreign militant groups is facing a serious challenge from IS, which has been gaining some support.

There has also been evidence that IS is trying to recruit Taliban fighters, with several Taliban commanders declaring allegiance to IS.

Why Taliban special forces are fighting Islamic State

Afghanistan fighters 'linked to Islamic State in Syria'

Islamic State 'recruiting Afghan fighters'