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Afghanistan
Dozens of Taliban killed in Afghan south
2007-05-12
Western and Afghan troops have driven the Taliban from a southern area after a week-long battle in which more than 70 militants were killed, an Afghan security official said on Saturday.

Violence has surged in Afghanistan in recent months after the traditional winter lull and an upsurge of fighting last year, the bloodiest since the Taliban's removal in 2001.

In the latest incident on Saturday, a roadside bomb killed at least eight Afghan police outside the southern city of Kandahar, provincial police chief, Esmatullah Alizai said.

There were no casualties among Afghan and Western troops in the fighting in Nahri Saraj of neighbouring Helmand province, scene of a series of operations by foreign-led forces in recent weeks, the security official said.

Five Taliban commanders were amongst those killed, the official said, adding there were no casualties among civilians.

"We have driven out the Taliban from the district and it is under our control," he said.

Foreign troops led by the U.S. military and NATO as well as the Taliban could not be immediately contacted for comment about the battle.

Nahri Saraj lies 25 km (15 miles) from Sangin district where witnesses said more than 40 civilians were killed last Tuesday in an air strike by U.S.-led coalition troops.

The coalition has confirmed civilian casualties in the battle of Sangin.

Separately, an air attack by Western forces killed at least seven civilians, including women and children, in Marja district of Helmand early on Friday, witnesses said on Saturday.

Seven of the civilians wounded in the attack were brought to a government run hospital in the provincial capital Lashkar Gah, they said.

"I know of six or seven deaths in my village," a wounded woman said at the hospital.

Afghan officials say U.S.-led troops have killed scores of civilians in the past two months in Afghanistan.

A U.S. commander apologised last week for the deaths of 19 civilians killed by coalition forces in March.
Posted by:Anonymoose

#2  Ask them if they apologized to the US for harboring and abetting those who trained and financed the islamists who drove killed 3000 on 9/11.

I didn't think so.
Posted by: anymouse   2007-05-12 21:42  

#1  apologizing sems the wrong move.

need instead to apportion blame on the taliban for using the civilians as shields and to promose more civilian causalties if the practice continues and that those also will be laid at teh feet of the taliban.

then the 'civilians' might lose thier enthusiam for supporting the bad guys.
Posted by: Abu do you love   2007-05-12 17:16  

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