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British soldier dies in Afghanistan blast: ministry

Pakistan joins NATO probe into deadly cross border attack
Peshawar, Pakistan (AFP) Oct 3, 2010 - Pakistan has sent a team to Afghanistan to probe a cross-border NATO attack that allegedly killed three Pakistani soldiers, forcing a key border crossing to close, officials said Sunday. Pakistan has blocked the main land route for NATO convoys carrying supplies to neighbouring Afghanistan since the helicopter attack on Thursday, which NATO claimed was in self-defence but was condemned by Islamabad. A two-member Pakistan team led by Brigadier Usman Khattak, deputy inspector general of the Frontier Corps, travelled to Afghanistan on Saturday to join an investigation into the incident by the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and US officials, an official told AFP by telephone.

NATO said aircraft had entered Pakistani airspace in self-defence and killed "several armed individuals" after the crews believed they had been fired at from the ground in the northwest tribal area of Kurram. It was the fourth such strike in a week by NATO helicopters pursuing militants into Pakistan, which the military claimed killed three of its men and officials condemned as a breach of Pakistan's sovereignty. Brigadier Khattak had already visited the site of the attack and held talks with troops deployed in the area, the official said, requesting anonymity. The border in Pakistan's northwest, that routes NATO supplies through the Khyber pass at Torkham, remained closed for a fourth day on Sunday.

"We will review the position when the security situation is normalised," the official said, adding that efforts were continuing to resolve the problem through negotiations. Queues of more than 200 trucks and oil tankers have formed at the border as they wait to deliver supplies to the 152,000 foreign troops fighting a nine-year Taliban-led insurgency in Afghanistan. "We are waiting for clearance from the customs authorities," a driver at the border told AFP. Washington has classified Pakistan's tribal belt on the Afghan border as a global headquarters of Al-Qaeda, a hub of militants fighting in Afghanistan and the most dangerous place on Earth.
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) Oct 3, 2010
A British soldier was killed in an explosion in southern Afghanistan, the defence ministry said Sunday, taking the country's military death toll there since the 2001 invasion to 339.

The soldier from the 1st Battalion The Royal Gurkha Rifles died during a patrol on Saturday in insurgency-hit Helmand province, said Lieutenant Colonel David Eastman, a spokesman for Task Force Helmand.

"The soldier was patrolling within the Nahr-e Saraj district of Helmand province, as part of the ongoing mission to protect and reassure the local population, when he was struck by an explosion," Eastman said.

Britain has nearly 10,000 troops in Afghanistan, the second largest contingent after the United States, with most of them deployed in Helmand, a centre for the Taliban insurgency and for the opium trade.

earlier related report
Three NATO soldiers die in Afghan south
Kabul (AFP) Oct 1, 2010 - Three international soldiers, two of them Romanian, died Friday in volatile southern Afghanistan, officials said, while an air strike killed 15 militants in the northeast near the Pakistan border.

The two Romanian soldiers were killed and a third wounded in a landmine explosion in the province of Zabul, the Ministry of Defence said in Bucharest.

The latest casualties bring to 17 the number of Romanian military personnel killed in Afghanistan since the US-led invasion in 2001 ousted the Taliban.

A total of 1,663 Romanian troops are currently deployed in the war-torn country, most of them as part of NATO's International security Assistance force (ISAF).

It was unclear how the third foreign soldier died, ISAF saying it was "as a result of a non-battle injury". That could mean an accident or suicide.

The alliance did not release the nationality of the soldier.

The three deaths took to 550 the number of foreign troops killed in the war so far this year -- the deadliest on record.

Washington and its NATO allies have increased the number of foreign troops fighting the nine-year Taliban insurgency to more than 152,000.

US-led troops have stepped up attacks on insurgents since the spring under a new war strategy which aims to root out Taliban militants before drawing down the military presence next year.

NATO said it called in air strikes in the northeastern province of Kunar on the Pakistani border, killing 15 insurgents "setting up what has been known as a historical attack position".

Afghan leaders have criticised air strikes on the grounds that they can result in collateral damage, but NATO said no civilians were killed.

ISAF claimed its troops killed up to 114 insurgents in September -- exactly twice the number of ISAF troops who died in the same time period.

It also claimed to have captured or killed more than 105 Haqqani network and Taliban leaders, including shadow governors and weapons facilitators.

The Haqqani network was created by Afghan warlord Jalaluddin Haqqani and run today by his son Sirajuddin. With its leadership based in Pakistan's North Waziristan district, the group is one of the toughest foes the US faces in Afghanistan.

Police in the southern province of Ghazni said two Afghan civilians and two policemen were killed in crossfire with insurgents.

Thursday's gunfight was part of almost daily violence plaguing southern and eastern Afghanistan, where the Taliban have concentrated their insurgency since being removed from power.



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