Security forces backed by US-led coalition helicopters attacked a suspected
Taliban hideout in southeastern Afghanistan, sparking an intense battle that
killed 41 rebels and six police, a senior official said Saturday.
Map locates Kandahar and Sangisar,
Afghanistan, where attacks took place Friday, killing 41 Taliban rebels.
[AP] |
The fighting was some of the heaviest
reported after Taliban threats to intensify attacks as the warmer weather melts
snow on mountain passes used by the militants.
Villagers said they appealed in vain for between 50 and 60 militants to leave
the area days before the clashes erupted Friday in Kandahar province, a former
Taliban stronghold near the border with Pakistan.
"Our elders had asked them (Taliban) to go away because we knew that one day
American helicopters will come and drop bombs," Faiz Ullah told The Associated
Press in Sartak, a village surrounded by blooming opium poppy fields and the
site of the heaviest fighting.
Provincial Gov. Asadullah Khalid said the assault was based on intelligence
that the militants were preparing to attack the regional capital of Kandahar.
While the firing had died down Saturday and the situation appeared under
control, security forces were still searching for some Taliban who had fled, he
said.
"We saw the 41 bodies of Taliban at the end of the fighting, but we collected
only 11," Khalid said, refusing to elaborate on why the other bodies were not
retrieved. He also said six police were killed.
U.S. military spokesman Lt. Mike Cody said coalition forces provided AH-64
Apache helicopters, which fired rockets in support of Afghan ground forces, but
he declined comment on casualty figures, saying it was primarily an Afghan
operation.
Ullah said Afghan police surrounded Sartak, about 25 miles southwest of
Kandahar, on Friday morning and asked villagers to evacuate, but some were still
inside their homes when the fighting broke out.
The 55-year-old villager saw only two militants and four Afghan policemen
killed in Sartak but said other Taliban may have been killed in nearby villages.
He also said his 19-year-old sister, Pari Bibi, died in a gunbattle between
Afghan forces and militants, while two other villagers, including a 10-year-old
girl, were wounded. But it was unclear who was responsible for those casualties.
On Saturday, villagers returned to their homes and local children gathered
shrapnel left over from the fighting. Three houses were badly damaged, and one
local farmer, Mohammad Naseem, 40, moaned that his poppy crop was ruined because
of a 16-foot-wide crater in the field.
No security forces could be seen in the area Saturday, despite official
claims that the hunt for Taliban fighters was continuing.
Taliban rebels have stepped up attacks against coalition and Afghan forces
over the past year, further jeopardizing Afghanistan's shaky democracy. Senior
U.S. envoy Richard A. Boucher warned earlier this month that the insurgency was
likely to worsen this year.
Some 1,600 people, including 91 American troops, died from violence in 2005,
the most in the four years since the Taliban were ousted by U.S.-led airstrikes
for harboring Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida. The United States has more than
18,000 troops in Afghanistan.
The violence also is a growing concern to other nations contributing troops
under the mandate of NATO, which is doubling its current force of 10,000 troops
to about 21,000 by November, as it gradually assumes command of all the
international forces in the country. Some 6,000 mainly British, Canadian and
Dutch troops have started moving into the rebellious southern provinces.
Suspected Taliban also opened fire on a vehicle carrying district
administrator Abdul Majid to work Saturday, killing him and wounding two guards
in the nearby southern province of Helmand, provincial government spokesman
Ghulam Muhiddin said.
Qari Yousaf Ahmadi, a purported spokesman for the Taliban, claimed
responsibility for the attack and insisted that Majid had been killed with seven
guards, a claim Muhiddin said was baseless.
Elsewhere in Helmand, a Taliban suicide car bomber rammed a British military
convoy in the provincial capital of Lashkar Gar on Friday, wounding three
British soldiers and one Afghan national, coalition officials said.
Helmand is Afghanistan's main opium poppy-growing region and fears of
widespread violence have risen since an aggressive poppy eradication campaign
started in recent weeks.
Rugged mountains in the province are popular hiding places for Taliban
rebels, many of whom are believed to slip back and forth across the largely
unguarded border with Pakistan.
Also this week, coalition and Afghan forces launched a major offensive,
dubbed Operation Mountain Lion, in eastern Kunar province where militants from
Taliban, al-Qaida and other groups are active.