The decision by President Ashraf Ghani to execute the prisoners on
death row was taken as part of a tougher policy towards the Taliban
following a suicide attack by the insurgent movement which killed at
least 64 people in Kabul.
A suicide bomber killed at least
10 people and wounded four on Wednesday in an attack on a bus carrying
staff from an appeal court west of the Afghan capital, Kabul, officials said, and the Taliban claimed responsibility.
The attack came on the same day the Taliban announced a new leader to succeed Mullah Akhtar Mansour, who was killed in a U.S. drone strike at the weekend.
Taliban
spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said the attack on staff from the judicial
system was in response to the Afghan government's decision earlier this
month to execute six Taliban prisoners on death row. Other attacks
would follow, he said.
"We will continue on this path," he said in a statement.
The decision by President Ashraf Ghani
to execute the prisoners on death row was taken as part of a tougher
policy towards the Taliban following a suicide attack by the insurgent
movement which killed at least 64 people in Kabul.
An
interior ministry spokesman said 10 people had been killed and four
wounded in Wednesday's attack, while the Taliban said 22 people had been
killed or wounded.
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