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Eight dead in fresh Afghan unrest: officials

by Staff Writers
Kandahar, Afghanistan (AFP) April 9, 2008
A policeman and seven Taliban rebels were killed in fighting in southern Afghanistan, including a foreign airstrike that also wounded two civilians, officials said Wednesday.

International forces' warplanes dropped bombs on a group of Taliban militants travelling by motorcycle overnight, killing three insurgents, said deputy governor of Zabul province, Gulab Shah Alikhail.

A civilian woman and a child from a nomadic tribe who had pitched their tents nearby were injured in the strike, Alikhail told AFP.

NATO-led forces fighting a Taliban-led insurgency here said they were not immediately aware of the bombing, while officials from the separate US-led coalition were unavailable for comment.

Hours earlier, an Afghan policeman and four Taliban militants died in a gunbattle after rebels attacked a patrol in the troubled neighbouring province of Helmand, a police commander said.

The hour-long fight erupted late Tuesday, provincial police commander Mohammad Hussein Andiwal told AFP.

"Four Taliban and a police officer were killed after fighting broke out following the Taliban attack on our patrol" in Marja district, Andiwal said, adding that two policemen were wounded.

The latest incidents brought the death toll from violence on Tuesday to more than 40 people, including 17 civilian construction workers and a NATO-led soldier, making it one of Afghanistan's deadliest days in months.

The Taliban were ousted from power in late 2001 in a US-led invasion and are waging an insurgency that has increased since early 2007. Most of the attacks are focused on southern and eastern Afghanistan.

Helmand is also the heart of the country's illicit opium industry. Afghanistan produces about 90 percent of the world's opium, which is used to manufacture heroin.

More than 8,000 people -- mostly Taliban-led rebels -- were killed in violence across Afghanistan in 2007, according to a United Nations report. About 1,500 of the dead were civilians.

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India, Pakistan to review peace process next month: ministry
Islamabad (AFP) April 9, 2008
Nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan will next month review the fourth round of a slow-moving peace process launched in 2004, the Pakistani foreign ministry said Wednesday.







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