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Gunmen torch two NATO trucks in Pakistan

Afghan probe accuses NATO of killing 65 civilians
Kabul (AFP) Feb 27, 2011 - Afghanistan's government said Sunday that its investigations have found NATO killed 65 civilians, many of them children, during recent operations in a remote northeastern militant stronghold. The death toll from several days of operations in Kunar province comprised 21 boys, 19 girls, 10 women and 15 adult males, President Hamid Karzai's office said in a statement quoting an official delegation. Karzai has now ordered his security chiefs to "discuss the issue" with international forces, his office said, without providing further details.

In response, a spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), Lieutenant Colonel John Dorrian, said it was "deeply sorry... for any civilian casualties that have occurred as part of this operation." But he disputed the death toll, saying ISAF's assessment only found five to seven civilians "may have injured." Investigations were continuing, he added. Karzai appointed the delegation last week after he first accused international forces of killing civilians in an operation targeting insurgents -- a highly sensitive issue in Afghanistan.

Karzai says such incidents erode support for his Western-backed administration. There are about 140,000 foreign troops, the bulk of them American, deployed in Afghanistan to help Kabul defeat the Taliban, but civilian casualties have exacerbated longstanding tensions between the government and its Western allies. On Thursday, NATO also said it was investigating allegations that fire from one of its planes killed five civilians in Kapisa province, north-east of Kabul. Local villagers had alleged the men were civilians hunting in the mountains of Alasai district when they were attacked by NATO planes, provincial police chief Abdul Hamid Arkin told AFP.
by Staff Writers
Quetta, Pakistan (AFP) Feb 27, 2011
Gunmen in southwestern Pakistan attacked two trucks carrying supplies to NATO troops in Afghanistan and set them on fire on Sunday, officials said.

The incident took place near the town of Mangocher, 120 kilometres (75 miles) south of Quetta, the capital of the restive oil and gas-rich Baluchistan province, which borders Iran and Afghanistan.

"Unknown gunmen on motorcycles intercepted two trucks carrying supplies for NATO troops in Afghanistan and set them on fire," tribal police official Munir Ahmed told AFP.

"Before setting ablaze the trucks, the attackers asked the drivers and helpers to abandon their vehicles," Ahmed said.

Muhammad Ashraf, another security official in the area, confirmed the attack.

NATO trucks and oil tankers are regularly targets of arson attacks blamed on insurgents attempting to disrupt two key supply lines that cross western Pakistan bound for foreign troops fighting in neighbouring Afghanistan.

Most supplies and equipment required by coalition troops in Afghanistan are shipped through Pakistan, although US troops increasingly use alternative routes through central Asia.

Baluchistan is torn by Islamist militancy, sectarian violence between majority Sunnis and minority Shiite Muslims, and a separatist insurgency by rebels seeking political autonomy and a greater share of profits from natural resources.

earlier related report
Burnt NATO tankers ablaze again in bomb blast
Peshawar, Pakistan (AFP) Feb 26, 2011 - Four NATO tankers gutted by a series of blasts on Friday caught fire again when an unexploded timed device went off Saturday, wounding two people in northwestern Pakistan, police said.

More than two dozen militants had struck a terminal on the outskirts of the northwestern city of Peshawar on Friday and planted devices on 12 out of 18 parked tankers carrying fuel for NATO troops in neighbouring Afghanistan.

Eleven tankers blew up while one remained safe. Militants also shot dead two guards drivers and two drivers who resisted them.

"An unexploded device in one of the 11 burnt tankers went off and triggered fire, which engulfed four tankers," local police official Imtiaz Shah told AFP.

He said that a bomb disposal squad rushed to the site and defused another unexploded timed device.

Another senior police official, Muhammad Ejaz confirmed the incident and said two persons in the terminal sustained minor injuries.

No group has so far claimed responsibility but the Taliban has claimed such attacks in the past. The bulk of supplies and equipment required by foreign troops in Afghanistan are shipped through Pakistan.

Pakistan shut its main northwestern border crossing to NATO supply vehicles for 11 days last September after a cross-border NATO helicopter assault killed two Pakistani soldiers.

Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants frequently launch attacks across northwestern Pakistan and the lawless tribal belt on the Afghan border, which Washington has branded the most dangerous place in the world.







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