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THE STANS
Suicide bomber kills five French soldiers in Afghanistan
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) July 13, 2011

Food aid needed for 3 million more Afghans amid drought: WFP
Geneva (AFP) July 13, 2011 - Up to three million more Afghans will need food aid by autumn as a drought leads to food shortages, the World Food Programme said Wednesday.

"The main wheat production in the north and north-west, that's where this crop failure occurred," said Bradley Guerrant, the UN food agency's deputy director in Afghanistan.

"They have failed both to late rain as well as insufficient rain," he added.

Local government estimates suggest that the overall harvest would be about 28 percent lower than a year ago.

While some of the shortfall could be made up by imports from the private sector, government reserves and a donation from India, about 300,000 metric tons will remain uncovered.

This shortfall would come on top of the regular food aid needed to feed about seven million people in the country.

The WFP noted that the budget to feed those already in receipt of aid is running $202 million short this year, but "additional resources may be necessary" to meet needs arising from this year's drought.

A suicide bomber killed five French soldiers Wednesday, in a blow to President Nicolas Sarkozy's struggle to defend his country's role in Afghanistan just a day after he returned from the country.

Sarkozy's likely rivals in next year's presidential election immediately urged him to speed the withdrawal of French forces, and even before the latest bloodshed barely a quarter of voters backed France's role in the conflict.

The president is due to honour troops returning from the front on Thursday at the annual Bastille Day military parade in Paris, but the event will now be overshadowed by the most deadly attack on French forces since 2008.

Five soldiers, aged 27 to 38, and an Afghan civilian died and four more troops and three locals were "gravely wounded" in the attack on a unit protecting a local tribal council in Joybar in the Tagab valley of Kapisa province, east of Kabul.

"A terrorist detonated his bomb close to the French soldiers," Sarkozy's Elysee Palace said, condemning the "cowardly murder" and expressing France's determination to remain part of the NATO-led coalition in Afghanistan.

Defence Minister Gerard Longuet said the attack took place after a meeting which was also attended by French military officials and Americans.

"When that meeting ended there was a suicide attack and an ambush," Longuet told France 2 television.

One of the wounded soldiers was in "very bad shape", the condition of the others was "under control".

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack in a text message to AFP's office in Kabul.

The attack was the worst setback for French forces since August 18, 2008, when 10 soldiers were killed and 21 injured when a patrol was ambushed by Taliban guerrillas in Uzbin, in the Sarobi district east of Kabul.

During Sarkozy's three-hour visit on Tuesday, the commander of the French contingent, General Emmanuel Maurin, told him the Taliban was losing support among the Afghan population but becoming more radical.

He described the insurgents as "mobile, aggressive and intelligent" and said they were looking for an opportunity to strike France in a surprise attack.

The deaths brought to 69 the number of French soldiers who have died in Afghanistan since 2001, when they deployed to support the US-led campaign to overthrow the Taliban regime and hunt Al-Qaeda militants.

Military officials said the unit included elements of the 1st Parachute Regiment, based in Pamiers in the Ariege region of southern France.

The Bastille Day march is the highlight of the French military's calendar, but will now be haunted by the ongoing violence in Afghanistan, amid calls for France to accelerate its withdrawal from the country.

Sarkozy announced on Tuesday during his trip to Sarobi that a quarter of France's 4,000-strong contingent would come home before the end of next year. Polls show most French voters oppose the war.

"You must know how to end a war," Sarkozy told journalists at the base. "There was never a question of keeping troops in Afghanistan indefinitely."

He has said no French "combat units" will remain in Afghanistan after 2014, but his opponents have gone further.

Would-be Socialist presidential candidate Francois Hollande has vowed that if he wins next May's election he will have all troops home within a year.

Another possible Socialist candidate, party leader Martine Aubry, reacted to the deaths by renewing her call for a "precise and determined" withdrawal plan.

"It's time to get ourselves out of this dead end," she declared.

The French military is also in action in Libya, where the air force is taking a leading role in the NATO bombing campaign against Moamer Kadhafi's regime and had dropped weapons to rebels fighting his forces.

French troops also helped overthrow former Ivory Coast president Laurent Gbagbo earlier this year after he refused to accept electoral defeat.

In all, France has 13,500 personnel deployed in overseas trouble spots.

npk-pa-dch-dc/lc




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Five French soldiers killed in Afghanistan
Kabul (AFP) July 13, 2011 - Five French soldiers were killed on Wednesday in a suicide bombing in Afghanistan's northeastern province of Kapisa, NATO's alliance force and a local police chief said.

The coalition's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) issued a statement saying five NATO soldiers had been killed in an insurgent attack in the east of the country, later confirming that the incident was in Kapisa.

The police chief in the district of Tagab in Kapisa said a suicide bomber had detonated in front of a French military convoy in the area, leaving "some casualties among the French forces".

"At around 11:25 today a suicide attacker on foot targeted a French convoy in Gulzarkhail village of Tagab district. There were some casualties among the French forces," said senior police official Sayed Sakhidad Matin.

He said an Afghan policeman had also been injured in the attack.

The office of French President Nicolas Sarkozy -- who paid a surprise visit to the war-torn country a day earlier -- later confirmed five French soldiers had died in the attack and said an Afghan civilian had also been killed.

Four more soldiers and three more local civilians were "gravely wounded" in the attack on a unit which was protecting a local tribal council meeting, the presidential statement said.

"A terrorist detonated his bomb close to the French soldiers," the Elysee said, condemning the "cowardly murder" and expressing France's determination to remain part of the NATO-led coalition fighting in Afghanistan.

The attack was the deadliest blow to French forces in Afghanistan since August 2008, when 10 soldiers were killed and 21 injured when a patrol was ambushed by Taliban guerrillas in the Sarobi district east of Kabul.

The deaths brought to 69 the number of French soldiers to have died in Afghanistan since 2001, when they deployed in support of the US-led campaign to overthrow the Taliban regime and hunt Al-Qaeda militants.

They are also a political blow for Sarkozy, coming a day after his visit to Afghanistan -- where he defended the campaign against opposition at home -- and the day before the Bastille Day military parade in Paris.

The march down the Champs Elysees is the highlight of the French army's calendar, but will now be overshadowed by the ongoing violence in Afghanistan, amid calls for France to accelerate its withdrawal from the country.

Sarkozy announced on Tuesday during his trip to Sarobi that a quarter of France's 4,000-strong contingent would come home before the end of next year.

NATO earlier announced the death of two foreign troops in the south, one in an insurgent attack on Wednesday, and a second in a bomb attack on Tuesday.

The latest deaths bring this year's toll to 306 foreign troops killed in Afghanistan, according to an AFP estimate based on data compiled by independent icasualties.org.





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