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News, March 2010

 
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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.

 

13 Afghanis, 8 US Soldiers Killed in 4 Attacks

 March 21, 2010

Taliban say 8 US soldiers killed in Afghanistan

Press TV, Sun, 21 Mar 2010 16:16:32 GMT Font size :

At least 8 US soldiers have been killed in two separate bomb blasts in the eastern province of Khost in Afghanistan, Taliban claimed Sunday. Taliban militants said two roadside bombs targeted convoys of US forces in the region, leaving at least 8 American soldiers killed.

The US military has yet to comment on the report. It previously said only 3 of its soldiers were wounded in the attacks. The report comes as the US military plans to deploy about 2,500 additional troops to Afghanistan, which has been destabilized by the presence of foreign troops since the 2001 US-led invasion. Large numbers of civilians and foreign troops have lost their lives across the country as militants continue to fight the foreign troops. MSD/MD

Bomb blast kills 10 in southern Afghanistan

March 21, 2010

by NASRAT SHOIB Nasrat Shoib –

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (AFP) –

At least ten people picnicking by a stream in southern Afghanistan to celebrate the Afghan new year were killed in a suicide bomb attack on Sunday, police and officials said.

A suicide bomber on a three-wheeled motorcycle had apparently been trying to blow up an Afghan army convoy, but missed his target, a spokesman for the government of Helmand province said.

"It was a suicide bomber who detonated a motorcycle as an Afghan National Army (ANA) vehicle was passing by," Daud Ahmadi told AFP.

"The blast killed ten civilians and injured seven others," he said, adding that it took place around 1.45 pm (0915 GMT) in the Gereshk district of Helmand, a cauldron of Taliban insurgent activity.

The blast struck a bridge on the main highway between the capital Kabul and Herat, Afghanistan's second city, he said.

Beneath the bridge, crowds had gathered on the banks of a stream to mark Nowruz, the Zoroastrian new year which falls on the March 21 equinox.

Helmand's provincial public health director, Anayatullah Ghafari, said two children were among the wounded taken to a local hospital.

Gereshk was the target of a military campaign in mid-2009 that attempted to eliminate Taliban insurgents in control of the area, along with local drugs cartels.

Afghan and NATO military chiefs have recently hailed the district as a model of success in clearing out insurgents and replacing their harsh style of justice with government security and civil services.

A military operation is under way in Marjah, about 70 kilometres (45 miles) south of Gereshk, as part of a counter-insurgency strategy aimed at clearing the Taliban out of Helmand, where they control a massive drugs industry.

Preparatory operations, led by US Marines and involving NATO and Afghan troops, have already begun in neighbouring Kandahar province, also a Taliban hotspot and the birthplace of their extremist movement.

More than 120,000 US and NATO troops are being reinforced for the operations, expected to hit 150,000 within months, in an effort to speed up an end to the war and allow foreign troops to draw down from mid-2011.

Afghanistan is just one of many Central Asian states marking Nowruz, though security is tight across the country amid fears of Taliban strikes which have been increasingly staged on national holidays and religious festivals.

The most recent major attack on Kabul occurred on February 26, the Prophet Mohammed's birthday, when two guesthouses were targeted in a suicide assault that killed 16 people, including Indians, who appeared to be the main target.

In eastern Khost province, which borders Pakistan, a roadside bomb -- a favoured weapon of the Taliban-linked fighters -- killed two construction company guards when it hit their car on Sunday.

Three other people were injured in the blast, said Amir Badshah Rahmatzai Mangal, head of the provincial public health department.



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