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Over 50
Taliban killed in Afghan battle
KANDAHAR (Afghanistan)—Afghan soldiers backed by NATO air power killed
more than 50 Taliban fighters during a two-day battle with militants who
tried to attack a southern Afghan town near the one they were routed
from this week, Afghanistan’s Defense Ministry said Wednesday.
Afghan soldiers fought the insurgents in Sangin, a town in Helmand
province that neighbors Musa Qala, which Taliban fighters had controlled
since February before abandoning it this week in the face of an
offensive by Afghan, British and U.S. forces.
“When the terrorists were defeated in Musa Qala, they escaped to Sangin
and started firing in and around Sangin,” the Defense Ministry said.
Among the 50 militants killed were three foreigners and three
commanders, the ministry said. It said no civilians were hurt or killed
in the operation.
There was no way to independently verify the death toll at the remote
battle site, and NATO’s International Security Assistance Force does not
release casualty figures for militants. Taliban militants overran Musa
Qala in February, four months after British troops left the town
following a contentious peace agreement that gave security
responsibilities to Afghan elders. U.S. officials criticized the deal as
surrendering to the Taliban. Afghan, British and U.S. forces moved into
Musa Qala’s center on Tuesday, and Afghan and British officials have
vowed to station troops there to prevent it from falling back into
Taliban hands. More than two dozen militants were killed during the
battle for Musa Qala, as was one British soldier.
Northern Helmand province is the world’s largest opium poppy growing
region and has seen the heaviest fighting in Afghanistan this year.
Helmand’s governor, Asadullah Wafa, said he and a delegation of
officials from the Afghan capital, Kabul, would travel to Musa Qala on
Thursday to hand out 5,000 tons of aid, including wheat and blankets, to
families who fled the fighting and are now starting to return.
“After 11 months the Afghan flag is again flying over the Musa Qala
district center,” Wafa said. All of the tribal leaders in Musa Qala now
support the government, Wafa said, adding that Afghan police and army
soldiers would have a strong presence there.
Though the militants were pushed out of Musa Qala — an important
symbolic victory for Afghan and NATO troops — Taliban fighters still
control three remote districts in northern Helmand — Washer, Naw Zad and
Bagrhan, said Afghan Defense Ministry spokesman Gen. Mohammad Zahir
Azimi. The Afghan-NATO force will continue operations in those areas, he
said. Meanwhile, a suicide car bomb exploded near an Afghan army convoy
in the southern city of Kandahar, killing one person, said the
provincial police chief, Sayed Agha Saqib. Two soldiers and four
civilians were wounded, he said.
This year has been the deadliest since the U.S.-led invasion in 2001.
More than 6,300 people have been killed in insurgency-related violence,
according to an Associated Press tally of figures from Western and
Afghan officials.
The Taliban struck back near the town of Sangin, further south in
Helmand, a mainly desert area sliced through by lush, fertile farming
land on the banks of the Helmand River and its tributaries.
“The enemies of peace and stability and terrorists could not stand
against the Afghan and NATO troops and considered their defeat for
sure,” an Afghan Defence Ministry statement said.
“After defeat in Musa Qala, the enemies put pressure on Sangin district
and began a fierce offensive using heavy weapons there, in the last two
days the brave soldiers from Afghan National Army defied the enemy
offensive in that district.”
British troops pulled out of Musa Qala in October 2006 after coming
under sustained Taliban attacks and left the town under the control of
tribal elders who pledged to keep the insurgents out; a deal criticized
by U.S. military commanders.—Agencies
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