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Five Czech soldiers wounded in Afghanistan attack: ministry by Staff Writers Prague (AFP) Oct 18, 2018 Five Czech soldiers have been injured in an apparent suicide attack on a military convoy in Afghanistan only two months after three others were killed, the Czech defence ministry said on Thursday. "The attack on the Czech patrol occurred on Wednesday around 1220 GMT near the Bagram base in the Parwan province," the ministry said in a statement. The five soldiers were injured when an Afghan civilian car loaded with explosives was blown up as the convoy led by an American vehicle was passing by. The blast swept the Czech vehicle with six soldiers -- the sixth in the convoy -- off the road and made it roll over to its side, Czech army chief of staff Ales Opata told reporters at a Thursday briefing in Prague. "Initial findings suggest the car had a driver. We can assume this was a suicide attack," he added. One soldier with serious injuries underwent two surgeries and his life is no longer in danger. Another with light injuries remained in hospital while the other three were released, the ministry said. The last soldier got away unscathed. On August 5, three Czech soldiers were killed in a suicide bombing while on patrol in the eastern Parwan province alongside a US soldier and two Afghan soldiers, who were wounded. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack. It was the deadliest assault on NATO soldiers in many months. The Lidove noviny broadsheet daily reported on Wednesday that Czech special forces had killed one of the August attackers and captured another, while Czech TV reported "far more" had been killed and captured. Thirteen Czech soldiers have been killed in NATO missions in Afghanistan. frj/mas/dl
China rolls out PR push on Muslim internments Beijing (AFP) Oct 16, 2018 China on Tuesday issued an ardent defence of the alleged mass internment of minorities in its far west Xinjiang region, with a regional official insisting that authorities are preventing terrorism through "vocational education" centres. Beijing has sought to counter a global outcry against the facilities with a series of op-eds and interviews and a roll out of new regulations that retroactively codify the use of a system of extra-judicial "reeducation" camps in Xinjiang. Up to one million ethnic ... read more
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