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Afghanistan
15 Taliban militants, including two commanders, killed in Ghazni
2007-11-02
A man and his two minor sons were shot dead by the US-led coalition forces in an overnight operation in the eastern province of Nangahar. Elsewhere, 15 suspected Taliban militants, including two commanders, were killed in a raid by NATO aircrafts in the volatile southern region. Also, the coalition said that it killed a top Taliban commander and several of his men on October 28 as they tried to infiltrate from Pakistan, AFP reported.

Local officials and residents said a vendor and his two minor sons were killed as US troops raided his house in Bhati Kot district, some 50 kilometres from the Torkham border. The vendor’s wife and a child were also injured. Scores of villagers from Takya village, where the incident happened, gathered outside the raided house and chanted anti-government and anti-US forces slogans.

A statement from the coalition’s Bagram base said the troops raided a compound in Bhati Kot district and killed one “militant”. The statement said, “The militant barricaded himself in a room despite repeated requests to surrender.” The troops found two dead children during the search of the room where the “militant” had barricaded himself, it said, adding that an injured woman and a child were also found, who were later sent to a nearby coalition medi cal facility. “It is regrettable when innocent lives are put at risk by militants,” said coalition spokesman Maj Chris Belcher. “[We offer] our sincerest condolences … to the families of the deceased and wounded,” he added.

Militants, commanders killed: In the southern province of Ghazni, police said 15 militants, including two local commanders, were killed as NATO aircrafts pounded their hideouts in Gilan district late on Wednesday. Ghazni police chief Ali Shah Ahmadzai told Daily Times via telephone that the airstrike was conducted on a credible tip-off. Two prominent local commanders, Mullah Moeenuddin and Mullah Shafiq, were also among the dead, he said.

Ahmadzai said the bodies of Arab citizens, believed to be Al Qaeda members, were also found on the site of the NATO bombing. The Taliban neither admitted nor rejected the claim. The commander, identified as Abdul Manan, who was crossing the border, was killed in the eastern province of Khost after security forces ambushed him and a dozen of his men as they crossed the border, the force said in a statement. The killing could not immediately be confirmed by Afghan officials.

Taliban in retreat:In Kandahar, Taliban rebels were retreating on Thursday after Afghan and Canadian troops halted their effort to take a district guarding the approaches to the southern city, Canada’s military said, Reuters reported. Taliban fighters overran the neighbouring centre of Bakwa on Wednesday and more than 400 families fled.

Delaram district chief Mullah Yahya said, “During the confrontation 14 Taliban insurgents and two Afghan police were killed and the Taliban set the district centre building on fire.” Meanwhile in Kabul, 11 policemen died in clashes with the Taliban, officials said Thursday, AP reported. Also Thursday, Taliban attacked a police checkpoint in Nad Ali district in southern Helmand province, killing five officers and wounding three others, said provincial police chief Muhammad Hussein Andiwal.
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Afghanistan
Hostage-taker among 40 Taliban killed: Afghan govt
2007-09-05
Afghan and US-led coalition forces said at least 39 suspected insurgents were killed in clashes since Monday, including a Taliban commander involved in the kidnapping of South Korean church workers while suicide blasts killed three police officers.
We had that story yesterday...
However, the US military said it was not yet clear whether any hostage-takers were among “several” insurgents killed during the pre-dawn clash in Qarabagh district of the Ghazni province. Ghazni police chief Ali Shah Ahmadzai said Taliban commander Mullah Mateen was among those killed, identifying him as one of the hostage-takers. “He was involved in the kidnapping. We have reconnaissance colleagues on the ground,” Ahmadzai told Reuters by telephone from Ghazni.

Taliban spokesman Qari Yousef Ahmadi said seven insurgents were killed in the clash, all of them cannon fodder ordinary fighters. He said the Taliban did not have a commander called Mullah Mateen, adding he did not know whom the government was referring to.
"Never hoid o' da mug!"
In the past, Afghan authorities have claimed to kill local Taliban commanders that turned out to be false. Taliban spokesman have also downplayed or lied about the extent of their battlefield losses.
No! Reeeeeeeally?
The suicide attacks took place Tuesday in Kunduz town in northern Afghanistan and on Monday in Paktika province. Officers in Kunduz had been trailing a suspicious vehicle before they challenged the driver as he neared the town’s bus station, deputy police chief Mohammed Omar Khail said. As they opened the doors, he detonated his explosives, killing two officers and wounding five others, he said.

In the attack in Paktika, a suicide bomber rammed his vehicle into a police car, killing one officer and wounding two others, said Ghamia Khan, spokesman for Paktika’s governor. Also Monday, a joint US-led coalition patrol came under suspected Taliban attack in southern Kandahar province, a separate statement said. At the request of ground forces, aircraft bombed the Taliban positions, killing “over one dozen” of the fighters, the statement said.
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