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6 killed in Afghan blast
Kabul -
A roadside bomb hit a vehicle carrying five policemen and a
child in eastern Afghanistan on Tuesday, killing all six, officials
said.
Taliban militants have increasingly
aimed their attacks at police, killing more than 925 officers in
2007 alone. Afghan police often work in small groups in remote and
dangerous territory, where they are outnumbered and outgunned by
insurgents.
The blast happened in the eastern
Khost province close to the border with Pakistan, said police chief
Gen. Mohammad Ayub. He blamed the attack on Taliban militants.
The victims included five policemen
and a 3-year old child, said Lutfullah Babakarheil, a local
government official. They were traveling in a private vehicle, he
said.
The lack of an effective training
program for the police is often cited as one of the West's biggest
failings in Afghanistan since the 2001 U.S.-led invasion that ousted
the Taliban regime for harboring Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida bases.
Police here are poorly paid, and
many complain that superior officers skim from their paychecks or
that they are not paid at all.
The U.S. began a new training
program this year that will see small teams of American soldiers
mentor and train police officers over the course of several months.
The program, which also gives the police upgraded weapons and
equipment, is expected to last four years.
Insurgent violence in Afghanistan
flared last year, when a record 6,500 people — mostly militants —
were killed, according to figures from Western and Afghan officials -- Associated
Press
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