KANDAHAR, Afghanistan(AP)
Afghan troops clashed with Taliban insurgents attacking a supply
convoy for NATO troops, killing nine militants, officials said
Saturday, while roadside bombs killed a NATO soldier in a separate
convoy and four policemen.
The violence came as Barack Obama arrived in Kabul as part of an
official congressional delegation. It was the Democratic
presidential contender's first visit to Afghanistan.
The militants were killed after they attacked a supply convoy
for NATO-led troops in Zabul province, said provincial police
official Jalali Khan. There were no casualties among the Afghan
troops, he said.
In neighboring Kandahar province, a blast struck a police patrol
in Maywand district, killing four officers and wounding another,
said Khan Mohammad, a police official.
Another bomb struck a NATO convoy in Kandahar's Panjwayi
district, killing a soldier, NATO's press office in Kabul said.
NATO did not release the dead soldier's nationality or say how
many were wounded. Most of the troops in the area are Canadian.
Southern Afghanistan is the center of the country's
Taliban-led insurgency. More than 2,500 people _ mostly militants _
have died in insurgency-related violence this year in Afghanistan,
according to an Associated Press tally of official figures.
In northwestern Pakistan, at least 10 Taliban died in fierce
fighting between two rival militant groups, a government official
and Taliban spokesman said Saturday.
Hundreds of supporters of top Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah
Mehsud clashed Friday with a breakaway faction of the group in
Mohmand tribal region, said local administrator Syed Ali.
He said both sides used rocket-propelled grenades and other
weapons in the fighting, which lasted for several hours. Between 10
and 15 men died, he said.
A spokesman for Mehsud's group, who identified himself as
Dr. Asad, claimed they killed 15 militants of the rival group and
captured 120, including two commanders whom he said were then tried
under Islamic laws and executed after being found guilty of slaying
one of their commanders.
Mehsud is the leader of a militant umbrella group,
Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, and he has been accused in the
assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, which he
denies. His supporters are believed responsible for numerous
bombings and attacks on security forces in the country's tribal
regions and other areas over the past year.
The government led by Bhutto's party _ installed after
winning Feb. 18 elections _ has encouraged peace talks involving
Mehsud's group and other militant outfits that has quelled
violence.
But Mehsud this week blamed the provincial government in the
northwest of Pakistan for recent military operations against
militants and threatened to attack it unless it quit by Tuesday.
The provincial government, has rejected the demand, saying it only
called in troops after Mehsud's men killed 17 Pakistani
soldiers near the town of Zargari last week.
Western officials are concerned the easing of Pakistani military
pressure on militants has given the Taliban and al-Qaida more
freedom to operate in Pakistan's tribal regions. The U.S.
military has reported a spike in cross-border attacks into
Afghanistan.
___
Associated Press writer Riaz Khan contributed to this report
from Peshawar, Pakistan.
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