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THE STANS
'Key commanders' among 30 militants killed in Pakistan
by Staff Writers
Peshawar, Pakistan (AFP) Dec 08, 2014


NATO closes Afghan command centre as combat winds down
Kabul (AFP) Dec 08, 2014 - Flags were lowered at Kabul airport Monday as the US-led NATO force in Afghanistan held a ceremony to mark the closure of its combat command centre after 13 years of fighting the Taliban.

NATO's combat mission will end on December 31 although some troops will remain to support the Afghan army and police, who have taken on responsibility for suppressing worsening Islamist violence nationwide.

At the ceremonial closure of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) Joint Command headquarters, which was based at Kabul airport, the force's US commander praised the strides made in handing over the mission.

"This is a historic transformation and reflects the progress that our coalition has made with our Afghan partners," General John Campbell said.

"As the Afghan national security forces have become increasingly capable, we shift our focus from combat operations to building (Afghan) systems and processes to ensure long term sustainability."

Campbell told NATO personnel: "You've done your job well, so well, that you've worked yourself out of a job."

However, concern is growing for Afghan stability as the NATO military presence declines, with the national security forces enduring record casualties in combat this year and following a series of high-profile Taliban attacks in Kabul.

About 130,000 NATO troops were fighting in Afghanistan in 2010 at the peak of the foreign intervention, after the 2001 fall of the Taliban regime that sheltered Al-Qaeda.

The NATO support force taking over on January 1 will be 13,000 strong, made up of mainly US, German and Italian troops.

Abdullah Abdullah, the number two in the Afghan government, said Sunday that NATO troops were pulling out too soon.

"It is too abrupt," Abdullah told the UK's Sunday Times.

"We need air support for the medical evacuation of casualties, intelligence and fast jets."

A main ceremony marking the official end of NATO's combat mission is scheduled before December 31, but the exact date has not yet been announced.

Pakistani airstrikes have killed at least 30 militants including a local warlord's "important commanders" in the country's restive northwest where the military launched a major offensive this year, officials and militant sources said Monday.

The target of the strikes late Sunday, in the Datta Khel area of North Waziristan tribal district, were local warlords Hafiz Gul Bahadur and his ally Sadiq Noor, security officials said.

Both are aligned with the feared Haqqani network and are accused of sending fighters and suicide bombers against US and NATO troops in neighbouring Afghanistan.

"At least 30 militants have been killed. Dozens of fighters and commanders were gathered for a joint meeting of both the groups," a militant source told AFP.

An intelligence official in the area confirmed the strikes and the death toll.

There were unconfirmed reports that Bahadur and Noor were among the dead but a second security official in the country's northwest told AFP they were still trying to verify the information.

"The only thing I can confirm is that the target of airstrikes was Hafiz Gul Bahadur," the official said.

A second militant source, a senior commander, told AFP that the two were seen in the area earlier on Sunday but it was not clear whether they had escaped the attack.

"Seven important commanders of Gul Bahadur and Sadiq Noor were among those killed in the airstrikes," he said.

Local residents said militants have sealed off the area to outsiders.

In a phone call from an undisclosed location, Ahmadullah Ahmadi, a spokesman for militant commander Bahadur, confirmed the airstrikes but said that both "Bahadur and Sadiq Noor are alive".

It was not possible to independently verify the casualties as media are banned from visiting the far-flung mountainous area.

Bahadur, a prominent local warlord once seen as "pro-Pakistani" is angry over the military offensive in North Waziristan.

He was the first militant commander to declare a ban on polio vaccinations in June 2012, which was later endorsed by tribesmen and other militant groups in other tribal districts and in the adjacent Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

North Waziristan is one of the seven semi-autonomous tribal districts that border Afghanistan. It has been a hub for Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants since the early 2000s.

The Pakistani military launched a major offensive in the district in June and says it has killed more almost 1,600 militants so far, with 126 soldiers losing their lives.

Separately, two policemen were killed early Monday in Pakistan's northwestern town of Buner, near the Swat Valley while on their way to their assignment to protect a polio vaccination team.

Asif Iqbal Mohmand, police chief of Buner, told AFP that unidentified gunmen ambushed the policemen who were on foot, spraying them with bullets in a pre-dawn attack.

Romania to change law to save Afghanistan 'hero dog'
Bucharest (AFP) Dec 08, 2014 - Romania on Monday ordered legal changes to save an ailing Alsatian that has served in Afghanistan from being put down because the state does not take charge of retired military dogs.

The fate of five-year-old Max, who has served on two missions in the war-ravaged country sniffing out explosives, has whipped up passions with an online petition to save the "hero dog" gathering nearly 27,000 signatures.

Max risked being sent to a dog shelter or being put down as there is no legal provision in Romania for the government to take over the upkeep of canines once they are off the defence rolls.

An emotive media campaign was headlined "Sent to die by those whose lives he saved," forcing Defence Minister Mircea Dusa to order changes to ensure the government takes over the upkeep of retired military dogs.

Dusa said this should be done by this week. He also asked parliamentary experts to look into how his ministry could be allocated a budget for this purpose.

An animal lover has in the meantime adopted Max while others donated money to ensure he gets medical treatment.

The dog's medical costs are roughly 150 euros ($180) a month.


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Beijing (AFP) Dec 08, 2014
A Chinese court condemned eight people to death Monday for two deadly attacks in Xinjiang, as Beijing cracks down hard on violence in the homeland of the mostly Muslim Uighur minority. Five others were given suspended death sentences, according to state broadcaster CCTV - a penalty normally commuted to life in prison - with another four jailed for varying terms. In one incident, assail ... read more


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