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Military base too close for safety, say Afghan survivors

British soldier killed in Afghanistan blast
London (AFP) Nov 16, 2009 - A British soldier was killed in an explosion in southern Afghanistan, taking the number of British deaths this year alone to 97, the Ministry of Defence said on Monday. The soldier was killed near Gereshk, in the Taliban stronghold of Helmand, on Sunday. He was serving with the 33 Engineer Regiment and was part of a unit defusing roadside bombs laid by the Taliban which have cost the lives of dozens of British troops, a statement said. His family have been informed. A spokesman for Task Force Helmand, Lieutenant Colonel David Wakefield, said: "His courage and the sacrifice made by him in the fight against Improvised Explosive Devices in Helmand will not be forgotten." The death brings the total number of British killed in Afghanistan since the 2001 invasion to 234.

British call for Afghan troops 'realistic': NATO chief
Brussels (AFP) Nov 16, 2009 - NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said a British call for 5,000 extra troops for Afghanistan from non-US allies was "realistic", but that it was too early to finalise numbers. "I find it realistic, but it's a bit premature to make a final assessment of exact troop numbers. We are right now in a final and very intense phase of consultation between allies," he told reporters in Brussels. "I would expect very important decisions in the next few weeks," he added, as US President Barack Obama mulls a change of strategy to try to put down a virulent Taliban insurgency. On Friday, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said he was confident of persuading Afghanistan war allies to contribute to an extra 5,000 troops on top of a likely US surge.

Brown, under fire at home as the British death toll mounts, told BBC radio he was sending envoys to fellow European countries in a bid to convince them to share the burden. The premier said he was confident that Obama would largely accept the call from General Stanley McChrystal, who commands international forces in Afghanistan, for tens of thousands more US troops. But in addition, "we need our other NATO allies to help," Brown said. "We can probably get another 5,000 forces into Afghanistan from that NATO and outside NATO group, and we'll be part of that." NATO leads a force of some 70,000 troops in Afghanistan drawn from more than 40 nations which aims to restore stability and foster democracy and reconstruction.
by Staff Writers
Bagram Air Field (AFP) Nov 16, 2009
Survivors of Monday's rocket attack on a market in Afghanistan that killed 10 civilians are certain that they were not the intended target.

"We were too close to a foreign military base, perhaps only 30 metres," said Shamshir Khan, a shepherd whose child was seriously injured in the attack, which hit a livestock market in Tagab, a district of Kapisa.

Khan's son was among the scores of casualties suffered when insurgents fired two rockets into the market as General Marcel Druart, the commander of French troops in eastern Afghanistan, met local leaders nearby.

Ten civilians were killed and 28 others were wounded, officials said.

Khan's son was airlifted by the US military to a hospital at Bagram Air Field. Khan and other family members were flown in too.

Speaking through an interpreter, Khan said he had gone to Tagab to sell four sheep ahead of a religious holiday later this month.

His son was seriously injured in the first blast, a rocket which struck without warning.

A second rocket landed a few minutes later, and Khan believes a friend and nephew were killed in the two explosions, although he could not be sure.

"There were a lot of people there from the region, because it was a market day," he said.

The base should not have been located so close to the market, said Khan, whose four animals were lost in the mayhem.

"We are just poor people," he said. "We cannot fight the foreigners and we cannot fight them (the insurgents). We are caught in the middle."

Mujahad, a 23-year-old labourer recovering from shrapnel wounds, said it was unusual for him to visit the market.

"I do not normally go there, but I wanted to buy sheep for the holiday," said Mujahad, who gave only one name.

He had arranged to meet a seller but before they found each other, the first rocket struck. Mujahad said as he was helping the wounded, the second explosion rocked the market, injuring him too.

"The market was too close to the base, perhaps only 25 to 30 metres," he said.

earlier related report
Deadly attack as French general meets Afghans
Kabul (AFP) Nov 16, 2009 - Afghan insurgents fired a pair of rockets into a crowded marketplace as a French general met local leaders nearby on Monday, killing 10 civilians, Afghan and French officials said.

A total of 28 other Afghan civilians were wounded in the attack in Tagab district, Kapisa province, just northeast of Kabul, deputy provincial police chief Abdul Hamid Hakimi told AFP.

"The enemy fired two rockets on the main bazaar in Tagab. Ten people, all civilians, were killed and 28 others were wounded," he said.

The bloody attack came as France's parliament was due to debate the mission in Afghanistan, amid mounting domestic political concern over a war opposed by a majority of French voters.

The attack occurred while General Marcel Druart, the commander of French troops in eastern Afghanistan, attended a "shura" of tribal elders 300 metres (yards) away.

French spokesman Admiral Christophe Prazuck told reporters in Paris that French and US medical teams evacuated some of the wounded to hospitals by helicopter, while armoured vehicles took others to the French base in Tagab.

Prazuck said that "three or four Afghans, including children" were killed outright, but that no French troops were hurt. Ten of the wounded Afghans were in a serious condition, he added.

Medical staff at a military hospital at Bagram Air Field, the giant, US-run base 50 kilometres (30 miles) north of Kabul, said helicopters brought in 13 wounded, some of whom required "urgent surgical intervention."

Doctor John Bini, head of the hospital's trauma department, said that one of the injured, an adult male in intensive care, was "not expected to make it due to severe head injury."

Four of the injured flown to the hospital at Bagram were children, ranging in age from four to 14, Bini said, adding that all were expected to survive their severe injuries.

Shamshir Khan, father of the one of the injured children at the hospital, said the attack came as Tagab held a market day for the sale of sheep ahead of a religious festival.

"There were a lot of people there from the region, because of the market day," said Khan, speaking through an interpreter.

Prazuck said Druart was attending the meeting as part of NATO's attempts to win the trust and support of local civilians in an area just 60 kilometres northeast of Kabul with a strong Taliban insurgent presence.

"A security cordon has been put in place by French forces based in Kapisa province, including Gazelle reconnaissance helicopters and Tiger helicopter gunships," Prazuck said.

France has the fourth largest contingent in the NATO force battling against the Taliban in Afghanistan, with 3,750 personnel assigned to the mission, of which 3,400 are based in Afghanistan itself.

This month, 2,500 French combat troops have been assigned to Task Force Lafayette, under American command, fighting in rough terrain northeast of Kabul to secure towns and transport links threatened by the rebels.

But as the French commitment has increased, concerns have been raised at home. Opposition lawmakers summoned Defence Minister Herve Morin and Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner to answer questions on the conflict on Monday.

In August, an IFOP poll of 1,005 French voters found 64 percent opposed France's participation in the campaign.

President Nicolas Sarkozy has promised not to increase French troop numbers in Afghanistan, although a small contingent of gendarmes is deploying to train Afghan police, and some members of his ruling UMP are getting cold feet.

At the weekend, the UMP speaker of the French senate, Gerard Larcher, told Le Monde that France should develop an exit strategy to avoid becoming an "occupation force" and to get troops home "within five or six years".

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Commentary: Afghan exit -- by Gorby
Washington (UPI) Nov 16, 2009
Did Mikhail Gorbachev launch glasnost and perestroika in the mid-1980s with the aim of bringing about genuine democratic change in the Soviet Union? That's what he says in two interviews on both sides of the Atlantic -- Euronews' Maria Pineiro and Nation Editor Katrina vanden Heuvel -- to mark the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War. ... read more







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