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THE STANS
Afghan suicide car bomb kills at least seven: officials
by Staff Writers
Kandahar, Afghanistan (AFP) July 2, 2012


A suicide car bomb attack outside a university in southern Afghanistan on Monday killed at least seven civilians and wounded more than 20, officials said.

The attack happened around 7:00 pm (1430 GMT) in Kandahar city in front of Kandahar University, around two kilometres (a mile) from a major US military base, provincial police chief General Abdul Razaq told AFP.

"This evening a suicide car bomb exploded near Kandahar university, killing seven civilians and wounding 23 others." he said.

The provincial governor's spokesman Jawed Faisal confirmed the death toll and said most of the victims were Afghans working at the US base, which was once the compound of Taliban leader Mullah Omar.

"A Toyota Corolla packed with explosives rammed into a minivan full of workers coming from the base," Faisal told AFP.

Kandahar was the birthplace of the extremist Taliban regime which ruled Afghanistan from 1996 until it was deposed by a US-led invasion in 2001.

It remains one of the hotbeds of the decade-long insurgency against the Western-backed government of President Hamid Karzai.

NATO and Afghan forces are the main targets for the militants, whose tactics frequently include suicide attacks, but local civilians working for the coalition are also targeted.

Two weeks ago Taliban attackers stormed two Afghan-NATO bases in Kandahar province, killing four police officers.

The bulk of NATO's 130,000 troops in Afghanistan are due leave by the end of 2014, handing security responsibilities over to local forces, and there have been concerns the pullout may lead to a return to the chaotic violence of the 1990s.

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Taliban 'won't derail' us: NATO on death of British troops
Brussels (AFP) July 2, 2012 - NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, condemned the death Monday of three British soldiers in Afghanistan and vowed that the Taliban would not impact on the alliance's campaign.

Speaking at a news conference, the NATO chief presented his condolences to the families of the three and said an inquiry had been opened "to determine the circumstances."

The soldiers, serving with an Afghan police advisory team, were shot by a gunman wearing an Afghan National Civil Order Police uniform, the International Security Assistance Force said.

"At this stage we can't confirm that it was actually an Afghan policeman who turned his gun against ISAF soldiers, we can confirm that it was a man wearing an Afghan national police uniform," Rasmussen said.

"The Taliban has clearly laid out a strategy to undermine confidence in the Afghan national security forces, but let me also stress that they can't derail our strategy.

"Our strategy is to gradually hand over full responsibility to the Afghans and that process will continue and be concluded by the end of 2014."

The deaths on Sunday took to at least 26 the toll so far this year from 18 attacks in which Afghan forces turned their weapons against their Western allies.

Rasmussen also said he hoped that talks with Russia to transit non-lethal supplies through its territory from Afghanistan "can be concluded very soon."

"It's in their and our interest to expand the transit arrangement," he said.



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THE STANS
Man in Afghan police uniform kills three NATO personnel
Kabul (AFP) July 2, 2012
A man in an Afghan police uniform has gunned down three NATO personnel in the war-torn country's troubled south, the coalition said on Sunday, the latest so-called "green on blue" attack. The deaths take the toll this year in "green-on-blue" killings - in which Afghan forces turn their weapons against their Western allies - to at least 26, in a total of 18 such incidents. In keeping wi ... read more


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