International News

Air strike kills 40 Taliban

Published Date: July 26, 2008

GHAZNI: Forty Taliban were killed in air strikes to take back a district of Afghanistan captured by Islamist rebels while a British soldier was killed in a separate clash, officials said Friday.Afghan and NATO-led ground forces supported by international military air support launched an offensive on Wednesday to retake Ajristan, 200 kilometres (124 miles) southwest of Kabul, after rebels stormed in Monday.

Over 40 Taliban fighters were killed and 30 were wounded in an overnight coalition air strike in Ajristan district," Ghazni province spokesman Ismail Jahangir told AFP as the operation continued Friday for a third day. The district governor, who fled after the Taliban captured the district, confirmed the air strike casualties and said two civilians also died. "On top of 40 Taliban killed and 30 wounded, we have information that two civilians were also killed in the bombing," Rad Mohammad Waziri told AFP.


International forces could not immediately confirm the air strike. Fifteen militants were killed on the first day of the operation by joint Afghan and international forces, Jahangir said earlier.

Ajristan was also captured by Taliban insurgents in October last year and was retaken the following day, when about 300 security forces moved into the small district centre. Taliban have captured several mainly remote districts in the past but have not been able to hold most of them for long, although there are a handful in southern Helmand province that security forces admit are in rebel control. The hardline Islamic Taliban were in government between 1996 and 2001 when they were driven out in a US-led in
vasion. They are waging an insurgency which has gained pace in the past two years, claiming hundreds of lives including scores of civilians.

A British army dog handler and his explosives sniffer dog were killed Thursday in Helmand when they came under fire while on patrol, the Ministry of Defence in London said. Six other soldiers were also injured, although not seriously. Meanwhile, in the western province of Farah, a roadside bomb apparently intended to hit Afghan or NATO troops blew up a civilian vehicle and killed three people, said Akramudin Yawar, police commander for western Afghanistan. He blamed the attack on the Taliban. -AFP