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Afghan police: Taliban kill 12 clearing mines U.S. troops killed and a top Afghan court official gu

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KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Taliban fighters shot dead at least 12 workers clearing mines Saturday in southern Afghanistan, authorities said, part of a series of attacks that saw two U.S. troops killed and a top Afghan court official gunned down.


Security in the capital, Kabul, has been stepped up as the Taliban have warned that attacks will continue as most foreign troops prepare to withdraw at the end of the month, 13 years after the Sept. 11 terror attacks sparked the U.S.-led invasion.

The attack targeting the mine-clearing operation struck southern Helmand province between its Nadali and Washir districts, police spokesman Farid Ahmad Obaid said. He said Taliban militants killed at least 12 workers and wounded another 12. Afghan soldiers later began a firefight with the insurgents, he said.

Obaid identified the company working on the project as Star Link. An employee of Star Link, who spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to journalists, said that the number of dead could be higher.

Mohammad Din, a Star Link manager, separately said 81 workers were at the site when the gunmen arrived.

Afghanistan, which has suffered decades of continuous war, is one of the most heavily mined countries in the world. The nonprofit Halo Trust estimates some 640,000 mines have been laid there since 1979 and at least 20,500 people have been killed and wounded by such ordinance since.

Those working on projects to clear mines are often targeted by the Taliban and other insurgents in the country. In April, Taliban fighters killed 12 people working on a mine-clearing project in Logar province, south of Kabul.

Afghanistan has experienced a sharp spike in violence since President Ashraf Ghani took office in September. The attacks have been concentrated in Kabul and aimed mostly at government, military and foreign targets. Five foreign nationals have been killed in three separate attacks in Kabul in the last month.

Late Friday, a militant attack on a military convoy killed two U.S. soldiers by the Bagram air base in Parwan province near Kabul, an international military official told The Associated Press. The official spoke on condition of anonymity as the information wasn't authorized for release.

NATO's International Security Assistance Force said in a statement that two service members "died as a result of an enemy forces attack in eastern Afghanistan." NATO does not identify the nationalities of the dead, relying instead on their home countries.

The deaths on Saturday were the first foreign troops killed this month, bringing to 65 the total number of international troops killed in the country this year, 50 of them Americans.

Early Saturday, gunmen shot dead Atiqullah Rawoofi, the head of the court's secretariat in Kabul's northwestern suburbs, said Farid Afzali, chief of the Kabul police criminal investigation unit.

A later explosion struck a Defense Ministry bus in southwest Kabul, said Khadam Shah Shahim, Kabul division commander of the Afghan National Army. He offered no casualty figures.

___Afghan police: Taliban kill 12 clearing mines - Yahoo News
 
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Rest in peace.
Well these attacks prove one thing and that is the moment USA soldiers leave I mean most, than the most Afghanistan will fall in the hands of Taliban these ANA can't resist them for long.
 
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Afghanistan attacks kill 20 on day of violence
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Soldiers secure the scene of the bus attack in Kabul
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Taliban Conflict
Taliban gunmen in Afghanistan have been accused of killing 12 landmine clearers on a day of attacks that saw at least eight other people killed.

Another 12 mine clearers were hurt when the Taliban struck in Helmand province, police said, adding that four gunmen were later killed.

A suicide bomber killed seven soldiers on a bus in Kabul and a court official was shot dead elsewhere in the capital.

Taliban attacks have mounted as the US and Nato wind down their mission.

As well as the de-miners killed, several others were reported missing, believed abducted.

They came under attack near the former British base of Camp Bastion by gunmen reportedly riding motorcycles.

Troops later engaged the attackers, killing four and capturing three, police spokesman Farid Ahmad Obaid told reporters.

After decades of war, Afghanistan remains one of the most heavily mined nations in the world, the BBC's Mike Wooldridge reports from Kabul.

Our correspondent says de-miners are supposed to be accepted as neutral by all parties to the conflict, as their work seeks to reduce the constant danger to civilians from the unexploded debris of war.

However, they are frequently the target of attacks. In April, Taliban gunmen killed 12 of them in Logar province.

A spokesman for the UN-supported humanitarian mine action centre in Afghanistan condemned Saturday's attack.

President Ashraf Ghani described the attack as the "work of the enemies of Afghanistan".

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Afghanistan's minefields
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  • Mines killed or injured an average of 39 civilians each month during 2013
  • Nearly one million Afghans (3% of the population) live within 500m (546yds) of landmine-contaminated areas
  • Minefields hinder development projects such as road construction
  • As many as 640,000 mines have been laid since Soviet invasion of 1979
  • Between 1988 and 2013, nearly 226,000 planted mines were destroyed by an NGO, Halo Afghanistan
 
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