Taliban attacks Afghan opium belt

Source: Agencies  |   2008-10-16  |     NEWSPAPER EDITION


TALIBAN militants attacked police checkpoints ringing a key provincial capital in southern Afghanistan for the second time in a week, sparking a battle in which 18 insurgents were killed, an official said yesterday.

The late Tuesday attack came only two days after hundreds of militants gathered on the horizons of Lashkar Gah for an apparent large-scale assault on the capital of Helmand province. NATO called in fighter aircraft and 60 militants were reported killed.

The second attempt on the capital of the world's largest opium producing region would appear to signal the Taliban's interest in disrupting a major government center.

Large-scale Taliban attacks on major Afghan towns have been rare since the 2001 United States-led invasion, and the latest push on Lashkar Gah could be a worrying development for NATO and US-led troops. Fighting typically takes place in small villages and rural areas.

Tuesday's battle killed 18 militants and wounded three police, said provincial police chief Assadullah Sherzad.

Sherzad said authorities recovered only one militant body and that the others were carried away by fighters. Afghan officials say they rely on intelligence reports to form militant death tolls.

Insurgency-related violence has killed more than 4,800 people, mostly militants, this year, an Associated Press count of figures from Western and Afghan officials shows.

In a separate incident, six policemen died after a shoot out among officers inside a police checkpoint about 20 kilometers north of Lashkar Gah, said Daud Ahmadi, the spokesman for the provincial governor.

"We are investigating how and why this incident happened," Ahmadi said. He provided no other details.



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