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Coalition raid kills 50 Taliban in Afghanistan

by Staff Writers
Kandahar, Afghanistan (AFP) May 29, 2006
Coalition warplanes bombed Taliban meeting in a mosque in southern Afghanistan on Monday, killing up to 50 suspected rebels, Afghan and the US-led coalition officials said.

Five Canadian soldiers were wounded and a suspected Taliban killed in a gun battle elsewhere in the volatile south.

The coalition said they had dropped a bomb on the rebels when they had retreated into a "compound" after attacking an Afghan and coalition patrol in restive Helmand province's Kajaki district.

"The Taliban had gathered for a meeting in a mosque and coalition forces identified their location," Helmand province's deputy governor Amir Mohammad Akhunzada said.

"In an attack by planes, around 50 Taliban were killed," he told AFP.

A coalition spokesman, Major Quentin Innes, said he could believe the figures given by Akhunzada.

"Based on the incident, that's not an unreasonable number," he said, after he was asked if the figures were accurate.

"This morning Afghan national security forces and coalition forces were attacked by ... suspected Taliban in Helmand province," the spokesman told AFP. The coalition responded by dropping a 2,500-pound-bomb on the compound.

A spokesman for the governor's office, Mohaidin Khan, confirmed the bombing but had no information on the casualties.

In separate incident, five Canadian soldiers were wounded and a suspected Taliban killed in a gun battle early Monday in Kandahar province, the Canadian military said.

The Canadians were wounded after encountering a Taliban attack some 20 kilometres (12 miles) west of the provincial capital Kandahar.

"Five Canadian soldiers were wounded in a firefight with Taliban forces," Canadian military spokesman Lieutenant Mark MacIntyre said.

Helmand and neighbouring Kandahar have seen some of the worst of a dramatic surge in fighting between Afghan and coalition security forces and militants linked to the Taliban regime that was toppled in late 2001 in a strike by a US-led coalition.

Around 400 people, most of them rebels, have been killed in fighting which erupted about 10 days ago, according to tolls issued by Afghan and coalition security forces.

Four foreign soldiers have also been killed including a Canadian who became the first Canadian woman to die in combat since World War II.

Security force and Taliban activity always rises as the weather warms but has been particularly intensive this year with analysts saying the rebels appear more organised and aggressive.

There are more than 30,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan serving either with a US-led coalition or a NATO force and working alongside the Afghan army and police. This includes about 2,300 Canadians.

The foreign troops, drawn from nearly 40 countries, arrived with the fall of the Taliban in 2001 in an invasion led by the United States after the harsh regime failed to surrender Osama bin Laden for the September 11 attacks.

Despite their presence, the insurgency has become more violent with each passing year and most of its leaders, who feature among the world's most wanted men, have evaded capture.

While much of the violence is focused in the south, especially Kandahar province where the Taliban movement was born in the early 1990s and rose to take control of most of the country by 1996.

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India, Pakistan agree on joint survey of contested marsh
New Delhi (AFP) May 26, 2006
Nuclear rivals India and Pakistan ended two days of talks Friday and agreed to conduct a joint survey of a disputed marshland considered of little strategic value, a spokesman said.







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