Six Taliban inmates on death row hanged, says Afghan government
Kabul: Six Afghan Taliban inmates on death row were hanged today, government sources said, in the first set of executions endorsed by President Ashraf Ghani since he came to power in 2014.
"In accordance with the Afghan constitution... Ghani approved the execution of six terrorists who perpetrated grave crimes against civilians and public security," the presidential palace said in a statement. A government source told AFP that all six were Taliban inmates.
Ghani last month vowed a tough military response against the Taliban and pledged to enforce legal punishments, including executions of convicted militants.
His unusually strong remarks were in response to a Taliban assault on a security services office in the heart of
The carnage on April 19 cast a pall over international efforts in recent months to jumpstart Pakistan-brokered peace talks, which stalled last summer after the Taliban belatedly confirmed the death of long time leader Mullah Omar.
Following Ghani's remarks, the insurgents had threatened "grave repercussions" if Taliban inmates were executed. "If the enemy (
"The enemy's supposed judicial bodies could once again pay a hefty price for their crimes."