Front Page
·   News
·   Politics
·   Economy
·   Election
·   Human Rights
·   Drugs
·   Sport
·   Refugees
·   Have Your Say
.   Y! RSS News
.   About Us
.   Advertise

Quick Vote


About Afghanistan
  President's Website
  Geography
  Brief History
  Embassy Listings

Relief Agencies
  Mine Action
  UNDP Afghanistan

Partner Sites
  Virtual Afghans






Afghanistan battle kills 41 Taliban: governor
15. April 2006, 12:10

By Mirwais Afghan, Reuters
Afghan forces and coalition helicopter gunships attacked a suspected Taliban hideout in southern Afghanistan, triggering a fierce battle that killed 41 militants, a provincial governor said on Saturday.

Six Afghan policemen were also killed, but there were no casualties among the U.S.-led forces in Friday's battle in the Zare Dasht district of Kandahar province, Kandahar Governor Assadullah Khalid told a news conference in Kandahar city.

A number of militants' bodies had been recovered, he said.

A senior provincial official who declined to be named said government forces suffered high casualties as several rockets mistakenly hit them.

Taliban forces have stepped up attacks on Afghan and coalition forces since announcing last month they had launched a spring offensive.

A Taliban spokesman, Qari Mohammad Yousuf, put Taliban deaths at only three and said there were "high casualties among Afghan and foreign forces."

Four civilians were also killed, residents said.

Khalid, the Kandahar governor, said some of the heaviest fighting in weeks erupted after Afghan and coalition forces came under attack during a search operation for Taliban hiding in the area.

Separately, Taliban gunmen killed a district chief and three policemen in neighboring Helmand province in an ambush on Saturday, deputy provincial governor Amir Mohammad said.

The Taliban spokesman said seven policemen were killed in that ambush, but Mohammad denied that.

U.S.-led forces killed six Taliban in an air strike in eastern Afghanistan on Friday. A blast elsewhere killed three policemen, while two British troops from the NATO-led peacekeeping mission were wounded in a suicide attack in Helmand.

Despite the increased fighting, the U.S. army plans to cut its 19,000-strong force in Afghanistan to 16,500 this year.

Thousands of NATO-led troops from Britain, Canada and the Netherlands are due to deploy in the south where the militants are mostly active.

U.S.-led troops overthrew the Taliban government in Kabul after its leaders refused to hand over al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden, architect of the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.

Printer Friendly Version | E-mail this to a friend

digg




Search:


News Overview
July 2010
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031


 Sponsored Links
 News Sites
» BBC Pashto
» BBC Dari
» BBC Online
» CNN
» Financial Times
» The Economist
» The News
» Frontier Post
» Yahoo! News
» UN News Center
» WSWS.org
» A. Press Monitor

 Business
» Money Converter

 Arts & Culture
» Cinema

 Afghan Music
» Ahmad Zahir

 Afghan Sites
» Farsi Dictionary

 Weather
» Kabul
» Herat
» Kandahar
» Mazar-e-Sharif
» Jalalabad
» Ghazni
» Kunduz

 Sponsored Links
Why is this here?






Email Us for your questions and suggestions.
All external sites will open in a new browser. AfghanNews.net does not endorse external sites.
All rights reserved. Copyright 2000-2010, AfghanNews.net
Computed in 0.76 seconds


View AfghanNews.net Stats