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News, April 2009

 

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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 

48 Afghanis Killed by US-Led Forces, April 12-13, 2009


Editor's Note:

In the past, initial reports of killing Taliban fighters turned to be incorrect, as many of the victims were civilians.

US: 8 alleged Taliban fighters killed in Afghanistan

Mon Apr 13, 5:29 am ET

KABUL –

U.S. troops and airstrikes killed eight alleged Taliban fighters in two provinces bordering Kabul, a U.S. military statement said Monday.

Airstrikes and "indirect" fire killed seven alleged Taliban fighters in Wardak province after they attacked an American patrol in the area Saturday, the statement said.

There were no American casualties in the clash, which happened in Sayed Abad district, it said.

Another alleged Taliban fighter was killed in a Saturday clash in neighboring Logar province after insurgents attacked a joint U.S.-Afghan patrol, the statement said.

Nearly 3,000 U.S. troops moved into Wardak and Logar earlier this year, as part of the planned increase of American military presence across Afghanistan. The additional troops will try to reverse the Taliban gains and help extend security and development in remote areas of the country.

President Barack Obama has also pledged to send an additional 21,000 U.S. troops to Afghanistan this year to battle the Taliban and al-Qaida.

There are currently roughly 65,000 international forces in Afghanistan, more than half from the U.S.

Afghan, international forces kill 40 alleged Taliban fighters

DPA, Sun, 12 Apr 2009 12:26:57 GMT

Kabul -

Afghan and international forces killed 40 alleged Taliban fighters in the latest clashes in southern and eastern Afghanistan, while a suicide bomber killed himself and wounded a civilian in the northern region, officials said Sunday. The police chief of Afghanistan's restive southern Zabul province claimed Sunday that Afghan forces backed by US-led coalition air support killed 22 alleged Taliban fighters in a clash.

The alleged Taliban fighters ambushed a convoy of Afghan soldiers and international troops in the province's Shinkay district on Saturday night, sparking a fierce battle that lasted for four hours, Abdul Rahman Sarjang, the provincial police chief said.

Shortly after the battle erupted, Afghan police forces and coalition aircraft joined the fight and killed 22 alleged Taliban fighters, Sarjang said.

"The bodies of the (alleged Taliban fighters) are still on the battlefield and four of them have been identified to be Pakistani nationals," he said, adding there were no casualties on the joint forces side.

The US military in a statement also said US troops killed four insurgents in Shinkay on Saturday but it was not clear if both Sarjang and the military statement were referring to the same incident.

Taliban spokesman, Qari Mohammad Yousif Ahmadi said that only three of their fighters were killed in the gunbattle, but claimed that Taliban fighters killed 48 Afghan and international soldiers.

Due to the remoteness of the area, it was difficult to get independent verification of the conflicting accounts.

Meanwhile, NATO-led forces in the eastern province of Kunar killed 18 alleged Taliban fighters in a clash in which close-air support and attack helicopters were also used on Saturday, the alliance said in a statement.

The NATO forces seized 10 AK-47s, rocket-propelled grenade launchers with ammunition, five radios and two hand grenades, the statement said, adding there were no casualties on the military side.

Separately, the first suicide attack since the fall of Taliban regime in late 2001 happened in the relatively peaceful province of Samangan province on Sunday, police chief Sharafuddin Sharaf said.

He said a bomber tried to enter the governor's office in Aibak, the provincial capital city, but his explosive-filled vest detonated prematurely in front of the government building, he said.

"The bomber who seems to be a boy of around 16 years was killed and a woman was wounded," he said, adding that the attack happened when the provincial governor was meeting with other local authorities.

In the south-eastern province of Khost, Afghan commando forces discovered and disabled a vehicle packed with explosives intended for use in a car bombing, the US military statement said.

The vehicle was left by the side of a road in Sabari district of the province, it said.

Police forces in the Garmsir district of the southern Helmand province identified and killed a would-be suicide bomber, who was approaching a police station on Saturday, the interior ministry said in statement.

The blast, which was triggered by the explosives-filled vest killed the bomber, but caused no other casualties, it said.

More than seven years since the fall of Taliban regime after the US military invasion, Taliban fighters are still a force to be reckoned with.

The Taliban fighters have gained more strength in the past three years, forcing the US government to plan the deployment of 21,000 additional combat troops and military trainers to contain the insurgency this year.

New forces will bring to 90,000 the number of international troops deployed to Afghanistan from 42 nations.




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