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12 Taliban militants killed in Afghanistan
shootout
KABUL—Afghan forces killed 12 suspected Taliban militants Tuesday in a
shootout south of the capital, while more than 30 suspected insurgents
were detained as security forces fought back against a deadly spike in
violence, officials said.
A fierce gunbattle broke out in Ghazni province's mountainous Andar
district as Afghan soldiers and police, backed by U.S.-led coalition
forces, entered an area where insurgents were holed up, said Mohammed
Ali Fakuri, spokesman for the provincial governor.
Twelve militants were killed in the ensuing clash and their bodies left
at the scene by comrades who fled, Fakuri said. Two policemen and one
Afghan soldier were wounded.
Ghazni and other southern provinces, particularly Kandahar and Helmand,
are gripped by the deadliest spate of fighting since U.S.-led forces
toppled the Taliban after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks for harboring al-Qaida
leader Osama bin Laden.
A U.S.-led coalition soldier was also killed and another injured when
their Humvee rolled over Monday in Kunar province's Asadabad district, a
coalition statement said.
Police arrested nine people accused of helping Afghan and Pakistani
militants prepare for suicide attacks, said Taj Uddin, spokesman for
Afghanistan's counterterrorism department. The nine were arrested Friday
in the eastern Logar province and transferred to Kabul for questioning.
"We have reports that four suicide bombers were aided by this group and
coming from Logar," said Uddin, who added one of the four was killed in
a recent attack on the Jalalabad-Kabul road.
Uddin had no details on whether the group was linked to the suicide
bombing in Kabul that killed at least 16 people, including two U.S.
soldiers.
Logar province tribesmen rejected the claim that the detainees,
including a child about 15 years old and an elderly man, were part of a
militant cell.
"They had a dispute with a man in their village, who accused them of
being involved with suicide bombings," said Haji Alkum, who traveled
from Logar to Kabul to try ensure their release. "They were shepherds,
not terrorists."
Police also confiscated several Iranian, Chinese and Russian-made
weapons, including machine-guns, bomb-making materials and thousands of
rounds of ammunition, from a house in the province allegedly linked to
the nine, Uddin said.
American and Afghan soldiers also detained nine suspected terrorists
belonging to the radical Hezb-e-Islami group of Afghan warlord Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar and the al-Qaida network, the U.S. military said.
U.S. and Afghan soldiers also arrested two men suspected of being
midlevel commanders of the Hezb-e-Islami militant group in the Khost
province area of Gorcak, the coalition said in a statement.
One of the men was a suspected bomb-making expert who was allegedly
linked to attacks in the Shembawot Bazaar village in Gurbuz district, a
May bombing of an Afghan army checkpoint in Khulbesat and the July
murder of an Afghan army lieutenant colonel.
Seven other militants, including a Hezb-e-Islami commander, were
arrested Monday in eastern Nangarhar province, the U.S. military said.
The other six were suspected al-Qaida members.
Separately in Wardak province, west of Kabul, police surrounded a
fortified compound at about 3 a.m. and arrested 12 Taliban, including
the head of the cell, said provincial police chief Gen. Mahboobullah
Amiri.
NATO said its soldiers captured seven suspected insurgents and disrupted
supply and communication routes through Helmand and Kandahar provinces.
Taliban forces also attacked a police checkpoint near the district
chief's office in Daychopan district of southern Zabul province Monday,
said provincial police chief Noor Mohammed Paktim. One militant was
killed and three wounded.—Agencies
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