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Taliban commanders killed in
Afghanistan
Kabul -
Afghan and NATO-led troops killed two regional Taliban commanders in
southern Afghanistan, and an explosion in the same province claimed
the life of a British soldier, officials said Thursday.
"As a result of this successful
attack (on the commanders), the Taliban's networks have suffered
another severe setback," said Brig. Gen. Carlos Branco, a spokesman
for NATO's International Security Assistance Force.
The joint NATO-Afghan forces killed
commander Mullah Abdul Matin and his associate, Mullah Karim Agha,
in the southern province of Helmand on Monday, the alliance said in
a statement.
NATO said Matin and Agha were
behind several suicide bombings in Helmand, the world's largest
opium poppy producing region.
The Taliban did not immediately
confirm the deaths.
Elsewhere in Helmand an explosion
killed a British soldier and wounded another Wednesday, Britain's
Ministry of Defense said in London. It said the wounded soldier was
treated for minor injuries.
The blast hit as a British patrol
was trying to disrupt Taliban activity, the ministry said in a
statement. The cause of the explosion was not immediately known, it
said.
The death brought to 89 the number
of British service members killed in Afghanistan since the troops
were deployed there in 2001.
Meanwhile, authorities in
neighboring Kandahar province detained seven men suspected of
involvement in a suicide bombing that killed more than 100 people
Sunday at a dog fighting competition in Kandahar, provincial Gov.
Asadullah Khalid said.
The bombing, which targeted a
militia leader who opposed the Taliban, was the deadliest insurgent
attack since the Taliban's ouster in 2001.
Afghan intelligence agents detained
the suspects in two separate operations Wednesday, Khalid said.
Insurgency-related violence in
Afghanistan killed more than 6,500 people in 2007 — the deadliest
year since the U.S.-led invasion in 2001, according to a tally of
figures from Afghan and Western officials. Most of the dead were
insurgents. -- Associated
Press
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