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Afghan army, NATO redeploy forces to respond to jailbreak threat

Britain to send 230 more troops to Afghanistan: minister
Britain is to deploy an extra 230 troops in Afghanistan, Defence Secretary Des Browne told parliament on Monday. Browne said 400 posts were no longer required while a requirement for 630 elsewhere had been identified in the violence-scarred country, where the death toll among British troops recently passed 100. The deployments would take the total number of British troops in Afghanistan to around 8,030 by early 2009. Prime Minister Gordon Brown said earlier that Britain would send more troops to boost the strength of its forces to the "highest level".
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) June 16, 2008
Afghan and NATO troops have redeployed into the southern Afghan province of Kandahar to respond to a "potential threat" from hundreds of Taliban who recently escaped from jail, the forces said Monday.

Afghan defence ministry spokesman Mohammad Zahir Azimi told a news conference in Kabul that "several" Afghan army units were dispatched to Kandahar to hunt the escaped rebels and respond to any threat they may pose.

"The main point is across all the security situation down there we're aware of a potential threat and we are anticipating. The Afghans send their forces... to Kandahar (and) we're also redeploying our forces to meet any potential threat," NATO civilian spokesman Mark Laity told the same news conference.

"It's fair to say that the jailbreak put lots of people into circulation that weren't before. Obviously you're gonna respond to that potential threat," Laity added.

Afghan and international troops have been searching for more than 1,100 escapees who fled after the Taliban blasted open the jail in the southern city of Kandahar late on Friday, killing several prison guards.

The Taliban have stepped up an insurgency against President Hamid Karzai's US-backed government since being ousted from power in late 2001, resulting in the loss of thousands of lives.

The jailbreak came as a blow to the president, coming one day after world donors pledged 20 billion dollars to rebuild Afghanistan at a conference in Paris but also called on him to strengthen the rule of law.

The Taliban militia said that 400 of its own fighters had escaped in the spectacular attack, which they said had been planned for more than two months.

Afghan authorities put the number of prisoners who fled at 886, more than 380 of whom were Taliban. NATO's International Security Assistance Force said more than 1,100 prisoners had escaped.

Afghan deputy justice minister Mohammad Qasim Hashimzai described the attack as the most sophisticated yet by the militants.

Despite the presence of about 70,000 international troops mainly operating under NATO, the insurgency aimed at toppling the US-backed government in Kabul has gained pace in the past two years and the Taliban have launched some of their most sophisticated raids in recent months.

In January several militants wearing suicide vests raided a five-star hotel in the capital Kabul, killing eight people including three foreigners.

And on April 27, Taliban gunmen opened fire on a military parade attended by Karzai, missing the president but killing three other people including an MP.

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Viagra and military secrets at the Bagram bazaar
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"I don't really know what it is for," says a salesman with some embarrassment, despite the explicit illustrations on the bottle of "Long Love Spray".







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