Suicide car bomb blast kills two at Kabul airport

Kabul, Sep 8 (ANI): At least two civilians were killed and six others were injured when a suicide car bomb exploded near Kabul’s military airport on Tuesday.

The windows of the city center were rattled due to the blast.

The car bomber rammed the main gate of the airport’s military base and exploded, reports BBC quoting the Afghanistans’s interior ministry sources as saying.

According to an eyewitness, the car bomb exploded near a NATO military convoy.

NATO-led alliance forces fighting the Taliban militia have an Air Force base at the Kabul airport, which is used for both civilian and military purposes.

The BBC also said that there were unconfirmed reports that members of Nato’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) were among the casualties.

“It was a suicide attack outside the main gate of the military base at the airport,” Nato officer Colonel Koziel Bart said.

The airport has been targeted in the past by suspected Taliban militants – in 2007, killing one civilian.

Tuesday’s attack follows a massive suicide car bomb last month on ISAF’s Kabul headquarters that killed seven Afghan civilians on the spot. (ANI)

EU police in Kosovo use tear gas to prevent unrest

Pristina – Policemen with the EU Kosovo mission EULEX in the city of Mitrovica deployed tear gas to prevent a potential violent confrontation between ethnic Serbs and ethnic Albanians on Saturday. According to local media, police were acting to prevent rioting in the majority Serb city against ethnic Albanians who had returned to repair their homes destroyed in the 1998-99 civil war.

The ethnic Serbs had demanded a ban on ethnic Albanians rebuilding their homes.

EULEX police were supported by units from the NATO-led peacekeeping force KFOR.

The Serbs announced they would continue protests and threatened to employ violence to stop the Albanians. Around half of the Kosovo’s ethnic Serb minority of 100,000 people live in Mitrovica.

Kovoso, which a year ago declared independence from Serbia, is inhabited by around 2 million ethnic Albanians. (dpa)

Afghan govt: Taliban sustain heavy casualties near Kabul

Kabul – Taliban militants have sustained heavy casualties in the latest operations by Afghan and NATO-led forces in the central province of Wardak, an Afghan provincial spokesman said Saturday. The operation started on Friday afternoon in Wardak’s Chak district, which lies on the south-western border of Kabul city, Shahidullah Shahid, a spokesman for the provincial governor, told the German News Agency dpa.

“Based on our intelligence information, so far around 50 Taliban militants have been killed and wounded during the operation which is still ongoing,” Shahid said, adding that two rebel commanders, Mullah Rahmatullah and Mullah Keramatullah, were among the dead.

He said the operation was conducted by hundreds of Afghan security forces and NATO-led ground troops, while NATO warplanes also pounded Taliban positions.

The operation left one Afghan army soldier dead, Shahid said.

Zabiullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman confirmed the clashes, but rejected government casualty claims. (dpa)

US commander: Pakistan must do more to fight Taliban

KABUL: Pakistan must do more to “erase” Taliban bases inside its territory which are destabilising the entire region, the US commander of Western
troops in neighbouring Afghanistan said on Sunday.

US President Barack Obama’s administration has pledged 21,000 more troops to join 39,000 American soldiers fighting Taliban guerrillas in Afghanistan.

It has also stepped up attacks by drones on suspected militant bases across the border in Pakistan.

US Army General David McKiernan, who commands more than 70,000 U.S. and NATO-led troops in Afghanistan, said he was confident the new troops would bring improvements in security to southern Afghanistan this year after years of rising violence.

But he described insecurity as a regional problem that could only be resolved by a stronger effort from Pakistan’s embattled government to tackle safe havens for militants.

“There must be an improved effort on the other side of the border against these safe havens that many of these insurgent groups operate from in Pakistan,” he told a news conference.

“There are sanctuary areas that have existed for many years across the border. They feed terrorism and insecurity on both sides of the border,” McKiernan said.

“I think it is safe to say there is an expectation that the government of Pakistan must erase these safe havens so that they are not a threat to their own country and the region. They will have the full support of the international community to do that.”
Pakistani authorities bristle at any suggestion that they have been lax in battling Taliban guerrillas on their side of the border. They say thousands of Pakistani troops have died fighting militants, and criticism of their effort only serves to increase anti-Americanism and boost support for the militants.

But international concern over Pakistan’s ability to fight the militants has grown in recent months as attacks by militants have increased both in Pakistan and Afghanistan. In the latest strike in Pakistan, a suicide car bomber killed 25 soldiers and police and two passers-by in on Saturday.

Afghanistan expressed worry last week about the impact on its own security of a decision by Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari to accept Taliban demands and impose Islamic law on the Swat valley, where militants have gained ground.

On the Afghan side of the border, Taliban attacks have increased to the highest levels seen since the militants were driven from Kabul in 2001.

“Challenges, generally, have increased in past years,” Afghan Defence Minister Abdul Rahim Wardak told the news conference in Kabul alongside the US commander.

“The level of enemy attacks have gone up, there are foreign combatants (in their ranks), the way they operate has become complex, they have access to better training and equipment.”

McKiernan said he would send most of the new US troops to southern provinces near Pakistan that have seen the greatest rise in instability, and he expected the influx to help.

But he said he had no power to intervene on the Pakistani side of the border. “Insecurity and instability is a regional problem and will require regional approaches,” he said.

Suicide bomber targets NATO forces in northern Afghanistan, hurts 2

Kabul – A suicide bomber targeted a convoy of NATO-led Norwegian forces Friday in northern Afghanistan, killing himself and wounding two soldiers while coalition forces killed six militants elsewhere in the country, officials said.

The bomber rammed his explosives-filled vehicle into the Norwegian convoy in the Takht Pul area of the relatively peaceful province of Balkh, said Abdul Raouf Taj, deputy provincial police chief. Two NATO vehicles were destroyed in the attack, he said.

A spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) confirmed that one of the ISAF’s military convoys was attacked in Balkh but would not elaborate.

Zabiullah Mujahid, a spokesman for Taliban militants, claimed responsibility for the attack and said Abdul Based, a resident of the southern province and Taliban stronghold of Kandahar, carried out the assault.

Mujahid claimed that 10 NATO soldiers were killed in the blast and three tanks were destroyed.

The peaceful northern region of Afghanistan is under the command of German forces, who are part of the ISAF. Currently, 3,800 German forces are stationed in the region while Berlin announced the deployment of 600 additional soldiers to be sent to country before the presidential election in August.

Meanwhile, Afghan and US-led coalition forces killed six suspected militants in an operation Thursday night in Kandahar’s Maiwand district, the US military said in a statement.

Five other militants were detained by joint Afghan-international forces in separate operations in Logar, Nangahar and Paktia provinces Thursday, the military said.

Suicide bomb attack kills three in Afghanistan

Kabul, April 17 (Xinhua) Three people were killed and three others injured Friday in a suicide bomb attack in Afghanistan’s western Nimroz province, an official said.

Two militants, with explosives strapped to their bodies, wanted to target the Afghan minister for refugees. The police shot dead one of the militants but the other one blew himself up.

The victims of the attack are all civilians, provincial governor Ghulam Dastgir Azad said.

The Afghan minister was touring the province at the time of the attack, but it was not immediately known whether the minister was present at the blast site.

This was the second suicide attack in Afghanistan Friday. Earlier a suicide car bomb attack in northern Balkh province injured two soldiers of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force.

The Taliban militants have vowed to intensify attacks on security forces this year in Afghanistan.

Afghan, NATO dispute civilian casualties in airstrike

Kabul – An Afghan district chief said Monday that a NATO airstrike killed six civilians and wounded more than a dozen others, but the alliance said that “multiple intelligence sources” suggested that four to eight insurgents were killed in the air raid. Zelmai Yousifzai, the district chief of Watapur district in the eastern province of Kunar claimed that six civilians, including two children, one woman and three men, were killed when their house was bombed by an aircraft under NATO command.

Yousifzai said that 14 other civilians were wounded in the raid that took place in the area soon after midnight.

However, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) claimed in a statement that they had credible intelligence information that four to eight insurgents had assembled in the area in the Watapur valley.

“Intelligence intercepts indicated the hostile intent of the enemy to attack ISAF posts,” the statement said, adding, “Due to the remote location, ISAF called in close-air support and eliminated the enemy threat.”

“Though the enemy assembly area was remotely located and no apparent civilian structures or personnel were detected prior to the strike, ISAF is investigating the possibility that non-combatants may have been injured.”

“We deeply regret any possible civilian injuries caused by our operations against the enemy,” Captain Mark Durkin, an ISAF spokesman, said in a statement.

“We will thoroughly investigate the allegations of civilian injuries and, if found true, provide assistance to support the law-abiding people affected,” he said.

Civilian casualties have become a delicate issue in Afghanistan. Afghan President Hamid Karzai has repeatedly pleaded with the international forces to avoid civilian killings during their anti-insurgent operations.

Last week five civilians including two women and two children, one of them only seven days old, were killed in a US-led operation in the south-eastern province of Khost. The US military confirmed that civilians were killed in that incident and apologized.

Afghan civilians have borne the brunt of anti-terrorism war in Afghanistan in the past seven years following the fall of the Taliban regime. More than 2,100 civilians were killed in Afghanistan violence last year, according to the United Nations. (dpa)

Afghan, international forces kill 40 suspected Taliban

Kabul – Afghan and international forces killed 40 suspected Taliban militants 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 suspected insurgents in a clash.

The militants 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 insurgents, Sarjang said.

“The bodies of the militants 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 suspected militants 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 militants are still a force to be reckoned with.

The insurgents 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. (dpa)

Pakistan says US drone strikes ‘counter-productive’

Islamabad, Jan 28 (ANI): Pakistan on Wednesday hit back against US Defence Secretary Robert Gates statement by saying that US drone strikes inside its tribal areas were “counter-productive” to anti-terrorism efforts.

“Our policy remains unchanged and we believe drone strikes are counter-productive,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Sadiq said.

Speaking in response to a statement from Gates that the United States would “go after al-Qaeda wherever al-Qaeda is” and affirming that the new US Administration’s position had been transmitted to the Pakistani Government.

“Both President (George W.) Bush and President (Barack) Obama have made clear we will go after al Qaeda wherever al-Qaeda is, and we will continue to pursue that,” Gates told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

But the Pakistani foreign ministry spokesman branded the strikes by drones “counterproductive to our efforts to counter terrorism.”

He declined to make any further comment, The News reported.

Two missile strikes in South and North Waziristan, on Pakistan’s side of the border with Afghanistan, where US and NATO-led forces are battling Taliban insurgents, on Friday last week were the first such attacks since Obama took office. (ANI)

British forces “take four key Taliban positions” in Afghanistan

London – British forces have taken four key Taliban positions during an 18-day offensive in southern Afghanistan’s Helmand province in which 100 Taliban fighters and five British soldiers were killed, the London Defence Ministry announced Sunday.

The ministry said the action began already on December 7 and involved some 1,500 British troops plus Danish and Estonian soldiers of the NATO-led International Security and Assistance Force (ISAF) plus Afghan government forces.

The aim of the offensive, which was concentrated around the town of Nad-e-Ali, was to improve security in the provincial capital of Lashkar Gah, a ministry spokesman said. (dpa)

British soldier becomes first NATO loss in Afghanistan in 2009

KabulĀ  – A NATO-led British soldier was killed in an explosion in southern Afghanistan, marking the first loss of the new year for the international forces in the war-ravaged country, officials said Friday.

The soldier was killed in a roadside bomb attack in Sangin district of the southern province of Helmand on Thursday, New Year’s Day, a NATO spokesman in Afghanistan said.

The soldier’s death came a day after another British soldier was killed in the same province. The soldier was the last British service member to die in 2008. A total of 138 British soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan since their deployment in late 2001.

“We are saddened by this brave soldier’s death, and our deepest sympathies go to his family and loved ones, especially during this season,” Royal Navy Captain Mark Windsor, a NATO spokesman, said in a statement issued by the alliance in Kabul.

“This dedicated professional risked his life to help bring security to the people of Afghanistan,” he said.

More than 8,000 British soldiers are stationed in Helmand province as part of some 50,000-strong NATO-led forces deployed to Afghanistan from 40 nations.

Helmand province is the main hub for Taliban activities. The province witnessed the fiercest clashes between Taliban and Afghan forces backed by NATO troops last year.

With more than 290 foreign soldiers killed in 2008, last year was the deadliest year for the nearly 70,000 international forces in Afghanistan. The year also witnessed an increase in attacks by Taliban-led insurgents.

The number of roadside bombings, a common tactic for the Taliban militants, nearly doubled last year with around 2,000 attacks that mainly targeted Afghan and foreign forces, according to US officials.

The militants also carried out more than 120 suicide attacks. (dpa)