40 Taliban killed in Afghanistan shootouts
Troops in Afghanistan killed around 40 Taliban rebels in two encounters on Tuesday, including a major battle near the Pak-Afghan border in which Pakistanis and Chechens were among the dead, officials claimed.
The nearly five-hour battle was in Paktia province that borders Pakistan's North Waziristan tribal district where Islamabad signed a truce with militants last month.
The fight started when Afghan troops came under attack in the province's Barmal area on the border, the defence ministry told AFP.
"The result -- 24 enemy were killed, their bodies were left at the site and we have carried them to our base," ministry spokesman General Mohammad Zahir Azimi said.
"Among the dead there are Pakistan nationals, Chechens and people from other countries, as well as Afghans," he claimed.
Eight people were claimed to be arrested alive, including three Pakistanis.
A military commander reported earlier on Tuesday that six Taliban and a soldier had been killed in a battle in Barmal. It could not be immediately confirmed if it was the same incident.
There is concern in insurgency-hit Afghanistan that the peace deal in North Waziristan has resulted in more militants crossing into the country to carry out attacks.
In the southern province of Uruzgan, a US-led coalition airstrike killed a Taliban commander and up to 15 other militants in an early morning raid.
Coalition aircraft dropped three bombs on an insurgent compound soon after 1:00 am, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement.
"The aircraft engaged a known mid-level Taliban commander... with three 500-pound bombs, killing him and 10 to 15 additional Taliban militants who had previously conducted ambush attacks on the Afghan National Army and ISAF," it said.
The separate ISAF and coalition forces together number about 40,000 troops. They carry out some of their operations together or with the Afghan security forces.
Police reported meanwhile that four Taliban were killed in an attack on Monday in Grishk district in the southern province of Helmand.
And in the neighbouring province of Kandahar, the birthplace and core of Taliban activities, a truck driver supplying fuel for foreign troops was killed and his vehicle was set ablaze by militants late on Monday, police said.
Also in Kandahar a district governor survived an assassination attempt on Tuesday, police official Esmatullah Alizai said.
The district chief of Mia Nishin escaped unharmed when unknown assailants opened fire on his vehicle, wounding two of his bodyguards, Alizai said.
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