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70 militants
killed in Afghan fighting
Foreign Desk Report
KABUL—U.S.-led coalition and Afghan security forces killed about 70
suspected militants in Afghanistan, where violence is running at its
highest level since the ouster of the Taliban regime six years ago,
authorities said Saturday. The surge in militant attacks comes despite
the presence of more than 50,000 foreign troops and 110,000 Afghan
police and military officers, as well as a multimillion dollar
reconstruction effort to rebuild the shattered nation.
Late Friday, Afghan security forces backed by U.S.-led troops raided
compounds in three villages in the remote Pitigal Valley border region,
where the coalition said intelligence showed that top militant leaders
take refuge as they travel between Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Afghanistan has accused Pakistan of failing to do enough to prevent the
movement of militants and weapons across the frontier. Pakistan — which
before 2001 had close ties with the Taliban — denies the charge, saying
it has deployed tens of thousands of troops.
The troops killed more than 20 insurgents and detained 11 others in the
raids, which were just 3 miles from the border. They discovered a
bomb-making factory and seized weapons and communication gear, the
statement said. One coalition solider was wounded in the raids, it said.
Meanwhile, a bomb attached to a bicycle in a commercial district of the
northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif wounded nine people, two seriously, said
police spokesman Sher Jan Durani.
In the central province of Ghazni, where the Taliban last week released
19 South Koreans they had held hostage for six weeks, Afghan police
attacked a group of Taliban planning to strike security forces, killing
18 and arresting six others, said provincial police Gen. Ali Shah
Ahmadai.
“It was a successful operation,” he said. A coalition statement said the
raid resulted in the seizure of mortar and artillery rounds, numerous
hand grenades, rocket-propelled grenades and other ammunition, it said.
It gave no more details. The Taliban abducted 23 South Koreans in Ghazni
six weeks ago. They killed two male hostages, released two women last
month and freed the final 19 last week after holding unprecedented
negotiations with the South Korean government that critics said risked
emboldening the insurgents.
In the Musa Qala district in southern Helmand province, a combined
police and coalition patrol came under attack on Friday from mortars,
rocket-propelled grenades and small-arms fire, the coalition said in a
statement. In the fight that ensued, almost two dozen insurgents were
killed. No Afghan or coalition soldiers, or civilians, were killed, the
statement said. Also in Musa Qala, Afghan forces Saturday called in
coalition airstrikes after coming under attack, the coalition said. The
strikes on the “known enemy positions” killed seven insurgents, the
statement said.
Militants have been running parts of Musa Qala since a peace deal last
year between local elders and Afghan government officials, supported by
British troops in the province. The deal effectively turned over Musa
Qala town and surrounding areas to Taliban control.
It was not possible to independently verify any of the death tolls
because travel to the areas is extremely dangerous. Taliban commanders
were not available for comment.
The Taliban ruled most of Afghanistan from the mid-1990s until 2001,
imposing an extreme version of Islam and harboring al-Qaida leaders and
thousands of other Muslim militants from around the world.
They were ousted by a U.S.-led coalition following the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks in the United States, but are now leading an increasingly bloody
campaign against the country’s Western-backed government. |