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Tuesday,
October 16, 2001
Attacks
on Taliban weapons storage sites continue in Kabul
By Kathy Gannon and Amir Shah
Associated Press
KABUL,
Afghanistan Huge explosions shook the Afghan capital
throughout the day Monday with two more jets reported attacking
the northern part of the city early Tuesday.
The
Monday air strikes sent terrified residents scurrying for
shelter, as U.S. jets pounded suspected weapons storage sites
in Kabul and across the country.
Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, speaking at the Pentagon, suggested
U.S. airstrikes could start targeting Taliban front-line positions
facing Afghan opposition fighters in the northeast of the
country.
The
opposition alliance claimed Monday it had advanced close to
Mazar-e-Sharif, the largest city in the north, and that some
4,000 Taliban troops defected over the weekend. The Taliban
denied the defection claim.
The
attacks Monday against Kabul started just before sunrise and
continued through the day into the night. Taliban gunners
fired in vain at the attacking planes, some so high they could
not be heard from the ground.
The
attacks in Kabul appeared to be directed at weapons and ammunition
storage sites in the hills north of the city of 1 million
people and around the airport.
In
one nighttime raid, 10 huge explosions in the direction of
the airport shook buildings miles away.
One
bomb exploded near a U.N. World Food Program warehouse on
the northern edge of Kabul, slightly injuring one Afghan employee,
U.N. spokesman Khaled Mansour said in Pakistan.
In
the Jalalabad area of eastern Afghanistan, U.S. jets struck
the regional military headquarters near the airport and Tora-Bora,
a suspected terrorist training camp of Osama bin Laden.
An
Afghan refugee arriving in the Pakistani border town of Chaman
said a suspected ammunition depot in Kandahar, the southern
city where the Taliban leadership is based, was ablaze after
a hit Monday by U.S. missiles.
The
United States launched the air campaign on Oct. 7 to root
out bin Laden the top suspect in Sept. 11 terror attacks
in the United States and to punish Afghanistans
rulers, the Taliban hard-line Islamic militia, who harbor
him.
Rumsfeld
said warplanes had dropped leaflets over Afghanistan for the
first time Monday.
In
other developments Monday, pro-Taliban Islamic militants in
neighboring Pakistan closed thousands of shops throughout
the country and clashed with police to demand an end to the
bombing campaign. But compliance with the strike was limited,
and some shops were open even in border cities where sympathy
with Taliban is high.
U.S.
Secretary of State Colin Powell arrived in Pakistan to meet
with President Pervez Musharraf and discuss reopening military
ties.
Also,
The USS Theodore Roosevelt was getting into position in the
region, bringing to four the number of aircraft carriers involved
in the campaign. The U.S. military has paid millions to buy
exclusive rights to some of the commercial sectors best
satellite imagery of Afghanistan aiming to prevent
the Taliban from getting hold of it.
The
Taliban Information Ministry claimed 12 people died Monday
during a raid in western Badgus province. The Taliban said
some 200 civilians were killed Thursday when U.S. jets attacked
the village of Karam in eastern Afghanistan.
In
Washington, Rumsfeld said some of the Taliban casualty claims
were ridiculous.
But
he acknowledged that some Afghan civilians have been killed
unintentionally, without
offering specific numbers.
He
said U.S. planes have so far avoided striking Taliban positions
on the front lines because of incomplete targeting information.
But he said that might soon change.
I
suspect that in the period ahead thats not going to
be a very safe place to be for Taliban
fighters, he said. We hope to have improved targeting
information in the period ahead.
Pakistan,
a key U.S. ally, has pressed for the U.S.-led air campaign
not to directly help opposition troops. Pakistan fears the
northern alliance, its longtime opponent, will seize power
from the Taliban.
The
Afghan opposition said Monday its troops had advanced to within
three miles of the airport at Mazar-e-Sharif, a strategic
city the Taliban have held since 1998.
Thank
God, the Taliban forces are unable to take the help of their
air forces, opposition spokesman Mohammed Ashraf Nadeem
said.
The
claim could not be independently verified, and the Taliban
had no immediate comment.
But
Taliban officials denied an opposition claim that 4,000 of
the militias fighters under a single commander had surrendered
to rebel troops on Sunday. Taliban Information Minister Qudratullah
Jamal said the commander in question had never had so many
soldiers under his authority.
There
were signs the attacks were increasing the suffering of the
Afghan people, already impoverished after more than 20 years
of civil conflict.
At
a Kabul hospital, doctors and mothers said the nightly power
cuts were threatening the lives of newborns, especially premature
babies who require incubators.
Please
have mercy on us and dont kill us, begged Rahim
Biba, mother of an infant born two months prematurely. We
are already in trouble. Dont add to our miseries.
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