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41 Taliban
killed in south Afghanistan
KABUL (Afghanistan)—Afghan and international forces killed 41 Taliban
militants in a battle in southern Afghanistan, and a suicide car bomb
attack on a convoy of U.S. troops left six Afghan civilians dead in
Kabul, U.S. and Afghan officials said Thursday.
None of the four American troops traveling in the two armored vehicles
of the convoy was badly wounded in the Thursday attack, said Lt. Col.
David Johnson, a spokesman for U.S. forces. The troops were traveling in
one SUV and one truck, he said.
Six Afghan civilians were killed and up to 20 others wounded in the
blast, Deputy Interior Minister Munir Mangal said. The attacker was
driving a white Toyota Corolla, he said, a favorite among suicide car
bombers. In a mobile phone text message to an Associated Press reporter
in Pakistan, Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid identified the suicide
bomber as Abdullah.
The suicide car bomb turned into a fiery hull that burned on the main
airport road long after the attack, which also damaged several other
vehicles. U.S. troops and international security contractors surrounded
the area after the blast.
Insurgents detonated 160 suicide attacks in 2007, a record number, the
U.N. has said. Last year was the deadliest in the country since the 2001
U.S.-led invasion with more than 8,000 insurgency related deaths year,
the U.N. said. In southern Helmand province, Afghan and international
forces attacked Taliban militants Wednesday morning as they traveled by
motorcycle toward the Pakistan border, said Ghulam Dastagir Azad,
governor of neighboring Nimroz province.
The troops employed airstrikes during the four-hour battle and killed 41
militants, including 17 from Nimroz, he said. A Taliban commander from
Nimroz was among the dead. The U.S.-led coalition could not confirm the
attack. NATO said they were looking into the report, but did not
immediately have any information.
In other violence, U.S.-led coalition and Afghan forces killed nearly a
dozen suspected militants in Helmand during a clash Tuesday in Garmsir
district, the coalition said in a statement. The troops had been
searching compounds for Taliban traffickers of weapons and foreign
fighters when they were came under fire.
In Wardak province, a remote-controlled bomb hit a police vehicle
Thursday in Saydabad district, killing one policeman and wounding four
others, said district police investigator Mohibullah Khan.
In Zabul province, Afghan security forces and NATO troops launched an
operation Wednesday against Chechen fighters meeting in Daychopan
district, said district chief Fazel Bari. The ensuing two-hour gun
battle left three Chechens dead and six wounded, he said.
On Wednesday in Farah province, authorities recovered the dead body of
the Pusht Rod district police chief, a day after he was kidnapped along
with five other policemen, said Bariyalai Khan, spokesman for the Farah
provincial police. There was no information on the fates of the five
other men.
A suicide car bomb attack on a convoy of US troops killed six Afghan
civilians in Kabul on Thursday, while fresh violence in the restive
south left at least 15 Taliban fighters and policemen dead.
The extremist Taliban movement claimed responsibility for the rush-hour
blast on the road to the capital’s international airport, in which four
US troops also suffered minor injuries and 33 Afghans were wounded.
Kabul police chief General Salim Ahsas told that six people were killed
in the suicide car bomb attack on US-led coalition forces. Health
minister Mohammad Amin Fatimi said 33 civilians were wounded and blamed
the attack on “enemies of Afghanistan”.
—Agencies
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