Internet Edition. September 27, 2007, Updated: Bangladesh Time 12:00 AM 
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Gunbatles kill 125 Taliban, one foreign soldier

AFP, Kabul



NATO and US-led troops backed up by warplanes have killed more than 120 Taliban insurgents in two major batles in southern Afghanistan, officials said Wednesday.

One soldier was killed, a trooper with the 15,000-strong US-led coalition who died during a day-long gun batle in the restive province of Helmand on Tuesday.

Around 60 rebels were killed in that batle, the coalition said, adding that air power was also used. The fighting erupted during an Afghan and coalition patrol aimed at clearing an area near the Taliban-controlled district centre of Musa Qala in Helmand. "The initial estimate by the ground force commander assessed that more than 61 insurgents were killed in the engagement," the statement said. The figures could not be verified independently.

More than 65 rebels were killed late Tuesday in a similar batle in the south-central province of Uruzgan, another hotbed for the Taliban insurgents, said a separate NATO-led force which has around 40,000 troops.

NATO warplanes and artillery supported the Afghan and NATO forces on the ground, it said.

"Precision-guided munitions were employed on positively identified Taliban positions, killing more than 65 insurgents," the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) statement said.

There have been several major clashes in southern Afghanistan in the past few weeks during which scores of rebels have been killed.

The nationality of the latest foreign soldier to be killed was not announced by the US-dominated coalition.

With the new death, 173 coalition troops have been killed in Afghanistan this year, most in combat operations against militants, according to an AFP count based on official figures.

An American, Canadian, French and two Spanish soldiers have been killed in action since Friday, while an Italian intelligence officer was severely wounded in an operation Monday that freed him and a colleague from Taliban kidnappers. The Musa Qala district centre has become one of the Taliban's most significant strongholds since the rebels overran the small town in February.

"The end is near for the Taliban that believe Musa Qala is safe from Islamic Republic of Afghanistan forces," coalition spokesman Major Chris Belcher said in a statement about the latest fighting.

"This combined operation is just one more step to securing the Musa Qala area of the Helmand province," he said.

The NATO force reported meanwhile that one of its helicopters overturned in the western province of Badghis late Tuesday while trying to land during a mission to rescue Afghan police wounded in a bombing. No ISAF staff were hurt during the incident, which did not involve hostile activity, it said in a statement The Taliban reportedly claimed the chopper was shot down.

The bomb blast killed three Afghan police and wounded four more, ISAF said.

A second helicopter was able recover the crew of the damaged helicopter and two critically wounded Afghan police.

The Taliban were driven from government six years ago and are waging an insurgency that has intensified this year with almost daily atacks in southern and eastern Afghanistan.

In other incidents reported Wednesday, two rebels were killed when a bomb they were planting on a road in southern Ghazni province went off on Tuesday, the defence ministry said.

And more than 36 Taliban insurgents -- 16 of them badly wounded -- were captured by Afghan forces after two separate batles in the eastern province of Paktia and central Wardak on Tuesday, officials said.

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