Afghanistan |
Ten Taliban, two anti-drugs officers killed in Nimroz |
2008-03-29 |
![]() In other insurgency-linked violence, the head of a programme promoting reconciliation with the Taliban was shot dead on Friday and six Taliban were killed in a battle on Thursday, officials said. The counter-narcotics police were travelling back to their headquarters in Nimroz province when they came under attack, provincial governor Ghulam Dastageer Azad told AFP. Ten Taliban and two police were killed in two hours of fighting and two Taliban were arrested, he said. Two policemen and several Taliban were also wounded in the incident in Khashrod district, he added. Destroying poppy: The police had been on a mission to destroy opium poppy crops. The United Nations has said that Khashrod is an important poppy-growing area, with a big increase in opium production expected in the province this year. Afghanistan is the worlds top producer of illegal opium, which is used to make heroin, accounting for more than 90 percent of the global supply. The government said last week that 100 counter-narcotics policemen had lost their lives in violence in the past year, most of them during efforts to eradicate opium poppies. In the southern province of Kandahar meanwhile, gunmen on motorbikes opened fire and killed the peace and reconciliation chief for the volatile Panjwayi district as he was leaving his orchards, the district chief Shah Bahram said. The official, Namatullah Sultani, was a tribal chief and headed the districts outreach to militants, who are offered an amnesty if they agree to stop fighting and support the government. This is the work of enemies of our country, said Kandahar deputy police chief, Amanullah Khan, referring to Taliban. Separately, around six Taliban were killed when a mob of militants attacked a convoy of about 150 border police in the western province of Badghis, border police commander for western Afghanistan, Rahmatullah Safi, said. Two police were wounded when their vehicle rolled over, he said. |
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Afghanistan | |
Nearly a dozen Taliban killed in Afghan clashes: coalition | |
2008-03-14 | |
He said he could not confirm a claim by the governor of western Nimroz province, which borders Helmand, that 41 Taliban were killed in the clash. Nimroz governor Ghulam Dastageer Azad said a Taliban commander named Mullah Tor Jan "with his 40 men were escaping to Pakistan from Nimroz via Helmand as they were attacked by the joint forces and they were all killed." He said 17 of them were buried in a district of Nimroz. Separately in southern Zabul province Afghan and NATO forces attacked a Taliban hideout in Daychopan district overnight, killing three "foreign" Taliban and wounding six others, district governor Mullah Fazel Bari said. In a separate incident a roadside bomb struck a police convoy Thursday on a highway in southern Wardak province, killing three policemen and wounding four others, provincial police chief Muzafarudin told AFP. The convoy was on its way from southern Ghazni province to neighbouring Wardak province when it was hit, he said. "Three police were martyred and four others were wounded in the blast," Muzafarudin, who goes by one name like many Afghans, told AFP. A Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, claimed responsibility for the blast in a telephone call from | |
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Afghanistan |
13 Taliban killed in attack on WFP convoy |
2007-09-10 |
![]() The WFP could not be immediately reached for comment. The organisation said in May that 20 of its food supply convoys had been attacked in Afghanistan in the previous 12 months, resulting in the loss of more than 500 tonnes of food aid valued at $350,000. |
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Afghanistan |
Several killed in Afghan-US raid |
2007-07-17 |
Afghan and US-led forces killed several suspected militants and detained another in a joint operation in southern Afghanistan on Monday, the US-led coalition said, while a suicide attack on a private Afghan security company vehicle killed one guard. The coalition said credible intelligence led them to residential compounds in Zabul province that were suspected of providing sanctuary to insurgents. During the operation, several armed males were shot and killed by the forces, it said in a statement. The men wore shoulder harnesses and had small arms, light machine guns and grenades, it added. The forces also detained a man who will be questioned regarding his identity and involvement in insurgent activity, the statement added. There was no indication of civilian casualties, it said. Militants like these pose a threat to the peace of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, coalition spokesman Major Chris Belcher said. ![]() Meanwhile Taliban militants attacked a highway police post overnight in western Nimroz province, sparking a two-hour gun battle which left seven militants killed and three wounded, governor Ghulam Dastageer Azad said. |
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Afghanistan | |
Taliban kill, burn Turkish engineer | |
2006-04-03 | |
Suspected Taliban militants shot dead and burned a Turkish engineer in an area of western Afghanistan where two other foreigners were killed last week, a provincial governor said Monday. The gunmen stopped a vehicle carrying the engineer and three Afghan bodyguards on a remote highway in Farah province Sunday evening, the governor of neighbouring Nimroz told AFP. "Armed Taliban in a station wagon stopped their vehicle, forced them out of the vehicle, disarmed his three bodyguards and shot the Turkish engineer," said governor Ghulam Dastageer Azad. "Later they poured fuel over his body and burned him."
Two foreign nationals were killed in the area on Tuesday last week when a remote-controlled bomb hit their vehicle. Three Afghans were also killed. | |
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