Afghan authorities said today they believe an Afghan police intelligence officer may have been involved in the shooting deaths of two US officers inside the interior ministry a day earlier, prompting Nato to recall all its staff from ministries.
Abdul Saboor (25) is the main suspect in the killing, which took place at close range well inside the heavily fortified ministry in the centre of the capital, Kabul, senior security sources told Reuters on condition of anonymity.
"Abdul Saboor is at large right now. He is the main suspect for us but we can not draw any conclusions over whether or not he is the killer," one of the sources said, adding that CCTV footage shows that Saboor had access to the Command and Control Centre where the slain Americans were found.
The killing of the American officers took place as rage gripped the country for a fifth straight day over the burning of
the Muslim holy book at a Nato base, despite an apology from US President Barack Obama.
Seven US military trainers were wounded today when protesters in Kunduz in the north of the country threw a grenade at their base, provincial police chief Samihullah Qatra told reporters.
Nato's International Security Assistance Force confirmed there had been an explosion outside one of its bases in northern Afghanistan, but declined to comment on casualties.
If yesterday's shootings are found to be linked to Afghan forces, new questions will arise about Taliban infiltration as well as their ability to secure Afghanistan once Nato combat forces withdraw in 2014.
The Taliban took responsibility for the American deaths.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai repeated his plea for calm and restraint today.
"I hope people will be calm and be assured that we are seriously pursuing this matter," he said of the burning of the Korans.
Riots across the country killed 29 people and wounded 200 more, Mr Karzai said, including the shooting of two US soldiers by an Afghan army officer who joined the protests earlier in the week.
France is also making preparations to withdraw non-military personnel from Afghanistan.
A foreign ministry spokesman said several hundred people would be concerned, but their actual departure could be halted depending on developments on the ground.
French military would not be affected, he said. France has 3,600 troops in Afghanistan as part of the
130,000-strong Nato-led force, mainly patrolling Kapisa, a mountainous province near Kabul.
They are due to shift their focus in March to training and leave the country at the end of 2013.
Reuters