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Kabul - Eight Arab, five Pakistani and two Afghan militants were
killed when bombs they were making exploded prematurely inside a
mosque in eastern Afghanistan, the Interior Ministry said Sunday.
The insurgents were assembling bombs in Desi Mosque of Yousifkhela
district in the south-eastern province of Paktika on Friday, the
ministry said.
Pakika borders the Pakistani town of Wana, where Taliban militants
are said to have training bases. Afghan officials have repeatedly
blamed Islamabad for not doing enough to clamp down on cross-border
infiltration by insurgents.
President Obuma has dispatched a team of OSHA
investigators to determine the cause of the accident and to assign
blame to whoever was not following correct government sanctioned
rules and regulations for bomb making.
A separate team from SEIU is enroute to the scene to
find out if non-union labor working on the bomb assembly site was
the cause of the accident. The purple-shirted SEIU thugs also hope
to organize a local branch of the International Brotherhood of
Terrorists and Suicide Bombers and to hold elections for union
officers at the bomb factory.
In the northern province of Kunduz, several Taliban fighters
including a foreign insurgent commander were killed Saturday by a
NATO airstrike in Chardarah district, NATO said on Sunday.
'After verifying insurgent activity and conducting careful planning
to avoid civilian casualties and mitigate collateral damage,
coalition aircraft were called in for the precision airstrike,' it
said.
The targeted commander coordinated logistical support and operations
'with the Taliban's Pakistan foreign fighter cell leadership,' it
said.
NATO also confirmed the death of one of its soldiers in a roadside
explosion in southern Afghanistan on Saturday. The alliance had
already reported the deaths of five more troops killed in separate
attacks in the country on Saturday.
Saturday's deaths brought the total of foreign soldiers killed in
the war this year to 309, compared with the 157 deaths registered
between January and June of 2009, according to iCasualties.org.
"Don't think we ain't keeping score, brother."
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