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Afghan, US forces shoot, wound five civilians: NATO

Two NATO soldiers killed in Afghanistan
Kabul (AFP) Jan 16, 2010 - A bomb blast in Afghanistan's restive south killed two NATO soldiers, hours after the death of an American trooper in a separate attack, a statement said Saturday. "Two ISAF service members were killed in southern Afghanistan as a result of an IED strike yesterday," said a statement from NATO's International Security Assistance Force, referring to an improvised explosive device. ISAF did not give their nationalities. IEDs, along with suicide bomb attacks, are the main weapons deployed by Taliban militants, and have become more powerful and deadly as foreign forces enhance security procedures, military officials have said. The bombs, made principally from fertiliser and detonated by remote control, can range up to 2,000 pounds (900 kilograms), a senior US military intelligence official said recently, destroying even the heaviest armoured vehicles. The southern provinces of Helmand and Kandahar are the most violent, but the Taliban has spread its fight to previously peaceful regions. Foreign troops under US and NATO command currently number around 113,000 and are being reinforced with another 40,000 over the course of this year as the counterinsurgency strategy moves into high gear. Five soldiers -- four American and one French -- died on Wednesday. On Monday, three US, two French and a British soldier were killed in violence in the deadliest day for international troops since October.

German soldiers kill Afghan at checkpoint: military
Berlin (AFP) Jan 17, 2010 - German soldiers opened fire on a car speeding towards a checkpoint in northern Afghanistan, killing an Afghan and wounding another, the military said Sunday. Soldiers had erected a temporary checkpoint in Kunduz after warnings of a suicide attack. A Toyota car had suddenly pulled out of the checkpoint queue and sped towards the guards, the German military said in a statement. "Despite hand signals and warning shots, the car did not stop but continued its journey at high speed towards the checkpoint," it said. "As a result of this escalation, the soldiers opened fire with their handguns and shot and wounded two passengers in the vehicle." The injured Afghans were taken to hospital in Kunduz. "Later, we received the news from the hospital that one of the patients had died in the meantime," the statement said. It did not make clear if they were civilians. The shooting follows a similar incident on Friday in which German troops shot and injured another Afghan driver whom they said had been speeding towards a checkpoint. Civilian casualties of the war against the Taliban are a touchy issue in Afghanistan, especially those caused by international troops. The NATO-led force in Kabul said its troops shot and killed a civilian in Afghanistan's south early Sunday when they fired on a large vehicle travelling at high speed without headlights towards one of its convoys. Germany has the third largest international contingent in the NATO force with about 4,300 troops, most of them in the north where security has deteriorated this year with a sharp rise in attacks on foreign forces. On September 4, a German commander called in a raid near Kunduz that killed up to 142 people, including several civilians. The bombing prompted public outrage, forcing the defence minister at the time to resign.
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) Jan 15, 2010
Five Afghan civilians were shot and wounded by US and Afghan troops outside a military base in a restive area of the country that was the scene of a violent demonstration a day earlier, NATO said Friday.

The incident took place in the Garmser area of Helmand province on Wednesday, NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement.

An ISAF spokesman said warning shots were fired as a crowd of up to 400 people gathered outside the gate of a military base, Combat Outpost Sher.

On Tuesday seven people were killed in Garmser during a demonstration sparked by rumours that foreign soldiers had desecrated a Koran in an operation the previous day, officials said earlier this week.

Referring to the Wednesday incident, Lieutenant Todd Breasseale told AFP: "The five Afghan civilians were wounded by bullets."

"A combined ISAF and ANA (Afghan National Army) force was outside the outpost. In the crowd, five or six individuals were threatening ISAF and ANA soldiers," he said.

"There were warning shots and the five or six individuals that were an imminent threat were targeted," he added.

In its statement, ISAF said a crowd of between 200 and 400 people were told to keep their distance from the gate of the base.

"However, a number of civilians in the crowd disregarded instructions, resulting in forces firing warning shots.

"Deliberative escalation of force procedures were followed, but one individual continued to ignore instructions, striking members of the combined force with a stick.

"ISAF forces medically evacuated five wounded civilians to the nearby Forward Operating Base Dwyer treatment facility," it said.

A government investigation team looking into the rumours that foreign soldiers had desecrated a Koran found they had been spread by Taliban operatives and were unfounded.

But during the demonstration Tuesday shooting broke out and seven people -- six civilians and an Afghan intelligence official -- were killed.

There was nothing in the ISAF statement Friday to indicate what had sparked the demonstration that led to the shootings outside the base gate on Wednesday.

The Taliban, who have a heavy presence in Helmand province, often whip up resentment against foreign forces deployed to fight them.

There are 113,000 international troops fighting the insurgents, with another 40,000 being deployed this year.

Civilian casualties are a sensitive issue among Afghans, and are often seized on by President Hamid Karzai to bolster support for his government.

A UN report released this week said civilian casualties rose 14 percent last year over 2008 but the overwhelming majority, 67 percent, were in Taliban attacks.

The Taliban rarely take responsibility for attacks causing high civilian casualties though their weapons of choice, remote-controlled bombs and suicide attacks, often kill indiscriminately.

ISAF also reported a separate incident in neighbouring Kandahar province, also an insurgent hotspot, in which two people were killed by soldiers who had been targeted by a remote-control bomb while on patrol.

"Immediately following the (bomb) strike, three motorcycles approached the patrol at a high rate of speed," it said.

"As escalation of force procedures were followed, the patrol perceived an imminent threat and shot and killed two individuals and detained four others."



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Pakistani Taliban leader escapes US strike: militants
Peshawar, Pakistan (AFP) Jan 14, 2010
Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud was in the area of northwest Pakistan where a US drone strike killed 10 people Thursday but left before the missiles hit, a militant spokesman said. Missiles fired by unmanned US aircraft hit a militant training camp early Thursday in a remote area on the border between North and South Waziristan, strongholds of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) ... read more







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