Afghan President Ashraf Ghani is expected to approve the execution of 11 Taliban and Haqqani prisoners, a government source told AFP, in apparent retaliation to the assault.At least three protesters were wounded, some of them critically, and were rushed to Kabuls Emergency Hospital, witnesses said.The Taliban currently in the midst of their annual "spring offensive" denied they were involved.The bombing during the holy month of Ramadan highlighted the ability of militants to strike even in the capitals most secure district, home to the presidential palace and foreign embassies that are enveloped in a maze of concrete blast walls. "Day after day, innocent civilians are being killed by terrorists.The Haqqani Network, long thought to have ties to neighbouring Pakistans shadowy military establishment, is led by Sirajuddin Haqqani who is also the Talibans deputy leader. If our leaders cannot restore security they should step down," he said.Health officials warned some victims may never be identified as their bodies were torn into pieces or burned beyond recognition."Another enraged Afghan said the protests would continue until Ghani and Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah resign. "We want justice, we want the perpetrators of the attack to be hanged to death.Afghanistans intelligence agency has blamed the Taliban-allied Haqqani Network for the attack.
It has carried out numerous attacks in Kabul, including the 2008 Indian embassy bombing that killed almost 60 people.With more than 400 people wounded, the injured spilled over into hospital hallways as people were still searching for missing relatives..Angry citizens have demanded answers from the government over the perceived intelligence failure leading to the assault, which underscores spiralling insecurity in Afghanistan.Public anger has mounted after Wednesdays brazen Torsion spring machine attack, the deadliest in the city since 2001, which was launched from an explosives-laden sewage tanker that tore a massive crater in the ground.Kabul: Afghan police on Friday fired live rounds to disperse hundreds of stone-throwing protesters seeking to march on the presidential palace to demand the governments resignation following a catastrophic truck bombing that killed 90 people and wounded hundreds. Demonstrators calling for President Ashraf Ghani to step down and chanting "Death to the Taliban" clashed with police near the bombing site, prompting officials to respond with live rounds, tear gas and water cannon as some protesters tried to overrun a security cordon."Our brothers and sisters were martyred in the bloody attack on Wednesday, and our leaders are doing nothing to stop this carnage," Rahila Jafari, a civil society activist, said during the protest.
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