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District governor, 11 police troops killed in northern Afghanistan

Other News Materials 11 July 2010 11:55 (UTC +04:00)
A district governor was killed by a roadside bomb in northern Afghanistan, where two separate insurgent attacks killed at least 11 policemen, officials said Sunday
District governor, 11 police troops killed in northern Afghanistan

A district governor was killed by a roadside bomb in northern Afghanistan, where two separate insurgent attacks killed at least 11 policemen, officials said Sunday, dpa reported.

   Maalem Aziz, administrative chief of Qaleh Zal district in Kunduz province, was killed Saturday night when his vehicle was struck by a bomb in Pangark area, Mohammad Omar, the provincial governor, said.

   Aziz's driver was also killed in the blast, while his son and his bodyguard were injured, Omar said.

   Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid took responsibility for the attack.

   Taliban militants also attacked a police post in Kunduz's Emam Saheb district near Tajikistan on Saturday night, killing six police troops, Mohammad Ayoub Haqyar, the district governor, said.

   A border police official who did not want to be named said that nine policemen were killed in the attack.

Kunduz is the most dangerous province in the relatively peaceful northern region. Insurgents are active in several districts.

   In another incident, a police vehicle was hit by a roadside bomb in Keshem district of Badakhshan province on Saturday night, killing five policemen, provincial police chief Agha Noor Kentooz said.

   The Taliban spokesman also claimed responsibility for that attack.

   There are about 4,500 German troops based in northern Afghanistan. Thousands of US troops were also deployed to the region earlier this year to confront a growing insurgency in the region far from Taliban's traditional power bases in the south and east.

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