Associated
Press
Troops Surround Taliban, Villagers Flee
By NOOR
KHAN 11.01.07, 2:32 AM ET
Afghan civilians
piled belongings onto trucks Wednesday and fled two villages
infiltrated by hundreds of Taliban militants outside Afghanistan's
second-largest city. U.S., Canadian and Afghan troops had about 250 of
the insurgents surrounded.
The troops killed 50
militants in three days of fighting 15 miles north of Kandahar city,
the provincial police chief said. Three policemen and one Afghan
soldier also died.
"The people are
fleeing because the Taliban are taking over civilian homes,"
Sayed Agha Saqib said. "There have been no airstrikes. We are
trying our best to attack those areas where there are no civilians,
only Taliban."
Saqib said 250
militants were surrounded, and 16 suspected Taliban have been
arrested.
In eastern
Afghanistan, meanwhile, a nighttime raid on a compound sparked a
gunbattle late Wednesday that left three people dead, including two
children, officials said Thursday.
The U.S. and Afghan
troops clashed with suspected militants belonging to a suicide bombing
network at a compound in Bati Kot district in Nangarhar province, said
Maj. Chris Belcher, a spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition.
After the clash, a
militant and two children were found dead inside the compound, Belcher
said, and a woman and another child were wounded. The military has
launched an investigation in the case, he said.
"It is
regrettable that the civilian lives were put in danger by the
militants and our sincere condolences goes to the families of the
deceased and wounded," Belcher said.
Afghan President
Hamid Karzai has pleaded repeatedly with Western forces to do all they
can to prevent civilian deaths, which have sparked resentment and
demonstrations against U.S. forces.
Fighters moved into
the Arghandab district of Kandahar province this week, about two weeks
after the death of a tribal leader, Mullah Naqib, who had kept Taliban
fighters out of his region. Karzai traveled to Kandahar for Naqib's
funeral.
"He was a good
influence for his tribe. He was supporting the government," Saqib
said of Naqib. "After he died the Taliban were thinking they
would go to Arghandab and cause trouble for Kandahar city. But now
they're surrounded and they're in big trouble."
The gathering of
fighters on the doorstep of Kandahar - the Taliban's former power base
- is reminiscent of last year's battle in neighboring Panjwayi
district, one of the biggest fights in Afghanistan since the 2001
U.S.-led invasion.
NATO officials have
said hundreds of Taliban tried to overrun Kandahar last year. But
Saqib said he did not believe the militants occupying the villages of
Chaharqulba and Sayedan would attempt a run on Afghanistan's main
southern city.
"We are
capturing and killing them and I don't think it will cause any problem
for Kandahar," he said.
U.S. Humvees and
Canadian jeeps crossed Arghandab's countryside on patrols Wednesday
alongside hundreds of Afghans fleeing the area in the middle of
harvest season, leaving their pomegranate crop at prime picking time.
Karimullah Khan piled
his three children into the front seat of a pickup truck and put three
female relatives in the back beside household goods and clothes. He
was driving to Kandahar city to stay with relatives, he said.
"The Taliban
came into our village and they told us to leave," Khan said.
"We just packed up our necessities and left. Our pomegranate
orchard and home we left behind."
Violence in
Afghanistan this year is the deadliest since the invasion that toppled
the Taliban regime. More than 5,600 people have died in
insurgency-related violence, according to an Associated Press count
based on figures from Afghan and Western officials.
Zarif Khan, the head
of a fleeing family of 15, said he had no place to take his relatives,
and may have to rent a room in Kandahar city. His family also left its
pomegranate crop.
"Our livelihoods
depend on this pomegranate crop, but these stupid Taliban came and
started fighting," he said. "We've got big trouble after
losing our leader."
The insecurity in the
south has also fueled an explosion in Afghanistan's opium crop, source
of most of the world's heroin. In Kabul, the U.N. anti-drug chief
warned that a "tsunami" of opium will hit Afghanistan's
neighbors if border security remains weak and officials fail to
intercept the drug, whose profits fund terrorism.
Afghanistan's opium
poppy harvest poses a "major threat" to neighboring
countries because more than 90 percent of the profits flow to
international criminal gangs and terrorists, said Antonio Maria Costa,
chief of the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime.
Afghanistan saw a
record harvest of 9,000 tons of opium in 2007, the U.N. said, a 34
percent increase from 2006. The export value of the opium is estimated
at $4 billion.
Associated Press
Writer Amir Shah in Kabul contributed to this report.
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