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Afghan Forces
kill 31 Taliban suspects
KABUL (Afghanistan)—Afghan government forces killed 31 suspected Taliban
militants near the eastern border with Pakistan, the Defense Ministry
said Monday, the heaviest reported fighting since landmark parliamentary
election two weeks ago.
Insurgents attacked an Afghan army position near Angore Adda in Paktika
province late Sunday, triggering a four-and-a-half hour clash. Both
sides used heavy weapons, said ministry spokesman Gen. Mohammed Zaher
Azimi. He said the militants eventually fled, leaving behind 28 dead
bodies of their fighters. Four Afghan army soldiers were injured, one
seriously.
“The fighting was intense,” Azimi said, adding that the army captured a
lot of ammunition from the militants, including anti-aircraft and
artillery shells and rocket launchers. He said no U.S.-led coalition
forces took part. Gen. Shorgul, deputy corps commander for the Afghan
army in three eastern provinces including Paktika, said the militants
had come across the border from Pakistan and fled back afterward. He
uses only one name.
Pakistan vehemently denies that it allows Taliban fighters sanctuary on
its soil. In recent days, its army has been fighting with militants in
North Waziristan on the Pakistan side of the border. Taliban and
al-Qaida rebels are active in the volatile south and east of Afghanistan
and have stepped up attacks this year. More than 1,300 people, including
hundreds of militants, have died in the past seven months.
In a separate clash Sunday, militants attacked a truck carrying supplies
for U.S.-led coalition forces in Surobi district of eastern Paktia
province, killing the truck driver, Azimi said. In fighting that
followed, three more militants were killed and two arrested.—Agencies |