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33 militants
killed in Afghanistan
KABUL (Afghanistan)—A series of clashes in southern Afghanistan left 33
suspected Taliban militants dead, while a roadside bomb killed two NATO
soldiers, officials said Saturday. Twenty-three Taliban militants were
killed during a U.S.-led coalition operation aimed at disrupting a
weapons transfer in southern Afghanistan, the coalition said Saturday.
A truck apparently full of Taliban weapons exploded during the operation
in Helmand province’s Garmsir district. Coalition troops detained 11
people suspected of being part of a weapons running operation. Also in a
south, a roadside bomb killed two NATO soldiers and their translator on
Saturday, the alliance said in a statement. Three other NATO soldiers
were wounded in the blast that hit the vehicle they were ridding, the
statement said.
NATO did not identify the nationalities of the dead and wounded soldiers
or the exact location of the blast. In Kandahar province, meanwhile,
Canadian and Afghan troops battled militants in Zhari district on
Saturday, leaving at least 10 suspected militants dead, said provincial
police chief, Sayed Agha Saqeb.
Authorities recovered the bodies of four dead militants alongside their
weapons and ammunition, Saqeb said. There were no causalities among
Canadian and Afghan troops, he said.
In the western province of Ghor, meanwhile, between four and nine police
were killed Friday after militants attacked them during a police
operation in Shahark district, Gen. Shah Jahon Noori, the provincial
police chief, said Saturday.
Separately, a suicide bomber on a motorbike attacked a NATO convoy in
Nangarhar province’s Chaparhar district on Saturday, killing an Afghan
civilian and wounding another NATO soldier, officials said. The bomber
was killed in the blast which also left two civilians wounded, said Noor
Agha Zuwak, a spokesman for the provincial governor.—Agencies
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