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Afghanistan-Pak-India
Suspected Taliban Kill 5 Police Officers
2005-11-02
Militants ambushed police on a southern Afghan mountain and killed five officers, officials said, while a statement issued Wednesday, purportedly by Taliban commander Mullah Omar, urged the insurgents not to end their armed struggle. It was not immediately possible to verify the authenticity of the Pashto-language statement. It was e-mailed to The Associated Press by Abdul Hai Mutmahin, who used to be a spokesman for the fundamentalist regime before it was ousted by U.S.-led forces in late 2001. "I call upon the Muslim nation to be united against the clever occupation force until the aggressors leave our soil," the statement said. "Fighting jihad is an obligation. Abandoning jihad is a big sin and a cause for humiliation of Muslims. Stand with us with your resources, with your lives."
Sure that's from Abdul? Sounds like fundraising spam I get from the DNC
Purported Taliban spokesmen occasionally release statements they claim are by Omar, who is believed hiding in rugged mountains along the Afghan-Pakistan frontier. Wednesday's statement was the second received by e-mail. Omar warned in the statement that the rebels will "intensify their attacks against the occupiers."
He keeps saying that. It means more corpses with turbans...
The Taliban have stepped up attacks in Afghanistan this year, leaving almost 1,500 people dead, making it the deadliest year since 2001.
Most of the 1500 are Taliban, I believe...
The violence has left large swathes of southern and eastern region off-limits to aid workers and raised fears for Afghanistan's nascent democracy.
The democracy seems to be working fine. It's the attacks by the adherents of the caliphate that're the problem...
U.S. military commanders predict the fighting is likely to ease during coming winter months as high mountain passes the insurgents use are covered with snow before picking up against in spring.
Dread Afghan Winter followed by the Dreaded Taliban Spring Offensive 2006.
In the latest fighting, suspected Taliban rebels ambushed police late Tuesday as they were driving in mountains in Helmand province's Dishu district, said Ghulam Muhiddin, the provincial administrator. Another purported Taliban spokesman, Qari Mohammed Yousaf, said insurgents beheaded the men after the battle, but this could not be confirmed.
That'd be when the men were safely dead, of course.
Purported Taliban spokesmen often call news organizations to claim responsibility for attacks, often with information that proves exaggerated or untrue.
Wow, the AP isn't taking their word as gospel? When did this start?
Posted by:Steve

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