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Afghanistan
25 Taliban militants killed in S Afghanistan
2006-09-23
(Xinhua) -- At least 25 Taliban rebels were killed on Friday by the police in the southern Uruzgan province of Afghanistan, an official told Xinhua. The police and some rebels exchanged fire in Chora district, killing 25 Taliban militants, said Mohammad Qasim, the provincial police chief. One policeman was also killed and another injured in the clash, he said. About 20 pieces of weapons including machine-guns were also seized by the police.

“Militants planted a roadside bomb to attack a bus carrying the workers, then shot them with machine-guns... ”
A local official told Xinhua on Friday that 19 Afghan construction workers were killed and three others injured in an ambush in the southern Kandahar province on Thursday. Militants planted a roadside bomb to attack a bus carrying the workers, then shot them with machine-guns in Shorawark district, about 200 km south of the provincial capital Kandahar city, said Haji Sultan Mohammad, the district's police chief.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Afghans capture Taliban commander
2005-06-06
KABUL, Afghanistan, June 6 (UPI) -- Afghan troops have captured a high-ranking Taliban commander who is thought to have led attacks on Afghan and U.S. troops, military officials announced. Haji Sultan, who was wanted by the U.S. military, was captured in the province of Farah in the west of the country, the BBC reported Sunday. Another senior Taliban fighter, Mullah Mohammed Rahim, also was arrested. Afghan Defense Ministry spokesman Zahir Azimy said that Haji Sultan had been handed over to the U.S. military for questioning.
For us? Why, thank you.

The United States has said the Taliban are down to around 2,000 men, with a declining appeal to former leaders and to the population. However, Taliban insurgents have stepped up attacks on Afghan and U.S. troops in the past two months, following a winter lull in their activities and prior to parliamentary elections scheduled for September.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Taliban kill Afghan election worker
2005-06-05
Suspected Taliban militants gunned down an Afghan working on a U.S.-funded electoral project, officials said Sunday in the first killing of a worker linked to landmark legislative polls scheduled for September. Authorities, meanwhile, revealed the names of 2,884 Afghans hoping to contest the parliamentary elections — the country's next key step toward democracy after a quarter-century of war. Among those who have enrolled to participate in the polls are former warlords, at least two leaders of the ousted Taliban regime and President Hamid Karzai's main rival in presidential elections last year, Yunus Qanooni.

In a separate case, security forces arrested two alleged Taliban leaders, while fighting between suspected rebels and Afghan soldiers near the main north-south highway in southern Afghanistan left at least one insurgent dead, officials said Sunday. Six other suspected Taliban rebels were captured in Saturday's fighting in Zabul province, said Afghan army commander Gen. Muslim Amid.

Intelligence officials arrested the two Taliban leaders as they were driving in western Farah province on Saturday, Defense Ministry spokesman Gen. Mohammed Zaher Azimi said. One leader was identified as Mullah Abdul Rahim — a deputy for a key Taliban commander said to be close to the militia's fugitive leader, Mullah Omar, Azimi said. The other is regional Taliban leader Haji Sultan, he said.

The Taliban and other insurgents have stepped up attacks following a winter lull in fighting. Afghan and U.S.-led coalition forces have hit back hard, killing more than 200 rebels since March, according to Afghan and American officials.

Election law permits any Afghan to participate as long as they do not have a criminal record and have severed any ties to armed groups.

The slain election worker was part of a project educating villagers on how to cast their vote in Uruzgan province's Tirin Kot district. He worked for the Afghan Civil Society Forum, said Susanne Schmeidl, an adviser to the national organization. The project is partially funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development, agency spokesman Rick Marshall said.

Suspected Taliban rebels surrounded a village in the district Friday and shot the election worker as he came out of a mosque, Schmeidl said. The victim's cousin also was shot, but his condition was not immediately known, she said. Friday's killing was the first of someone working on the September elections, said a spokesman for the election commission, Sultan Ahmad Baheen.

At least 13 election workers were killed ahead of October's presidential polls, and there are fears that the September ballot also could be violent. Beside the candidates registered for the legislative elections, another 3,186 people have signed up to participate in elections for new provincial assemblies, said Richard Atwood, chief of operations for the joint U.N.-Afghan election commission.

Those lists include 588 women, he said. Females were banned from all public life under the hard-line Taliban movement, which was ousted by a U.S.-led invasion in late 2001 for harboring Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaeda terrorist network. At least a quarter of all seats in the national and provincial assemblies have been reserved for women. Enough have registered for the national legislature, but there is a shortage for the provincial votes and five seats in the assemblies will be left vacant, Atwood said.

The legislative elections were initially scheduled for June last year, but were delayed because of slow preparations and efforts to disarm warlords and militia commanders who the United Nations feared would intimidate voters. Atwood said that lists of candidates have been displayed at election offices around the country and people have until Thursday to formally challenge a candidate's right to run. An independent committee will rule on the challenges and a final list of approved candidates will be published July 12.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Afghans arrest Taliban commander
2005-06-05
Afghan forces have arrested a senior Taliban commander accused of leading attacks against Afghan and U.S.-led troops based in the west of the country, a defense ministry spokesman said on Sunday. Haji Sultan, a division commander for the Taliban, was arrested with Mullah Mohammad Rahim, another senior Taliban official, in the western province of Farah on Saturday, said the spokesman, Zahir Azimy. "Haji Sultan was on the U.S. military black list and we handed him over to them for investigation," Azimy said. The U.S. military confirmed Sultan's arrest, describing him as a bomb maker, but said he was seized on Thursday. A Taliban commander, Mullah Dadullah, said by telephone from Quetta an undisclosed location Sultan had not been arrested.
Mullah Dadullah then said, "Who are you going to believe, me or your lying eyes."
Asked if Sultan's arrest might help lead authorities to the fugitive Taliban leader, Mullah Mohammad Omar, Azimy said investigations would try to determine that.
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