Airstrike Kills Evil Muslim Taliban Leader Behind South Korean Kidnappings

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Officials: U.S. Airstrike Kills Taliban Leader Behind South Korean
Kidnappings
Tuesday, September 18, 2007

KABUL, Afghanistan - U.S. airstrikes targeting a meeting of Taliban leaders
killed a high-ranking commander involved in the kidnappings of 23 South
Koreans two months ago, Afghan officials said Tuesday.

Meanwhile, NATO reported that another of its soldiers had died in an
explosion in Afghanistan, where violence has soared this year amid a
Taliban-led insurgency.

Mullah Abdullah Jan, the Taliban commander of Qara Bagh district in Ghazni
province, was among 12 killed in the strike on a mud-brick housing compound
overnight, said Ghazni provincial police chief Gen. Ali Shah Ahmadzai.

Jan was the fifth Taliban commander allegedly involved in the abductions who
has been reported killed in recent days, and believed to be the
highest-ranking one eliminated so far. Jan watched as his fighters stopped
and kidnapped a tour bus carrying the South Koreans in July, Ahmadzai said.

Neither the U.S. military or NATO's International Security Assistance Force
had any immediate comment.

Afghanistan's Interior Ministry on Sunday said police had killed three
Taliban commanders allegedly involved in the abductions. Another, a Mullah
Mateen, was said to be killed in fighting earlier in the month.

There have been several military operations in Ghazni since the release of
the last of the captives on Aug. 30, possibly reflecting the desires of the
Afghan government or U.S. and NATO forces to assert authority over the
rebellious southeastern region following the abductions.

Two of the Korean hostages were slain soon after the kidnappings on July 19.
Two women were released later during the Taliban's negotiations with South
Korea. The remaining 19 were freed after further Taliban-South Korean talks.

An explosion Monday killed the NATO soldier and wounded another in southern
Afghanistan, the alliance said Tuesday. The NATO statement did not provide
any further details about the incident or the nationality of the victims.

In Helmand province, meanwhile, a gunbattle in Garmser district Monday
killed six suspected Taliban, while nine others were killed in an airstrike
in Kajaki district, the Ministry of Defense said.

More than 4,300 people - mostly militants - have died in insurgency-related
violence this year, according to an Associated Press tally of figures from
Western and Afghan officials.
 
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