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12 Afghans killed in bombing, US raid
KABUL—US-led troops killed at least four people, including a teenage
girl, in a raid in southeastern Afghanistan on Tuesday and a suicide
bomber killed eight more in the south, residents, officials and
coalition forces said. The target of the suicide bomber was the governor
of Helmand, Mohammad Daud, who escaped unhurt, the officials said.
Four police, two army soldiers and two civilians were killed in the
attack in Lashkar Gah, the provincial capital of Helmand, a Taliban
stronghold and the main drug-producing region of the world’s leading
heroin producer. “It was a suicide attack and the target was the
governor,” Helmand police chief Mohammad Nabi Mullahkhail said.
The attack is the latest in the bloodiest year to have gripped
Afghanistan since U.S.-led forces overthrew the Taliban government in
2001. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, but
Taliban militants have carried out many such raids across the country
this year.
Hours before the blast, U.S.-led forces killed at least four people in
the southeastern province of Khost where the Taliban and their Islamic
allies are highly active. But there were conflicting accounts about who
was killed in the pre-dawn raid in Dornami village.
Residents say the U.S.-led force, backed by Afghan militias, broke into
a house, drawing fire from the occupants who thought they were thieves.
Four people were killed and seven wounded — all of them civilians, they
said. The U.S.-led coalition said in a statement the raid killed five
people — four suspected terrorists and a young girl. The troops
requested the surrender of those in the compound.
“The suspected terrorists refused to comply with verbal warnings and
began firing,” the statement said. “Enemies of the Afghan government
continue to place women and children in harm’s way by conducting illegal
activities within common living areas, placing entire families at risk,”
the statement said.
The U.S.-led coalition has about 8,000 troops under its command in
Afghanistan, after overthrowing the Taliban’s hard-line Islamist
government in 2001. NATO leads about 32,000 soldiers in the country.
Thousands of civilians have been killed during fighting since the
Taliban’s ouster. Civilian deaths are a sensitive issue for the foreign
forces and President Hamid Karzai’s government, which largely relies on
foreign funds and on foreign soldiers. The focus of the violence has
been southern and eastern areas bordering Pakistan, the Taliban’s main
former supporter and still a sanctuary for the militants. On a rare trip
to the southern city of Kandahar, Karzai said he had urged NATO
commanders to use all possible means to avoid civilian casualties. He
also urged Pakistan to speed up proposed meetings of tribal chiefs aimed
stemming the rising insurgency. Karzai said the deterioration of
security recently in Pakistan’s border regions was linked to the
presence of militant bases there. —Agencies |