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N. Korea fires 3 short-range guided missiles into its eastern waters, South reports

By , May 19, 2013 4:59 am

N. Korea fires 3 short-range guided missiles into its eastern waters, South reports
By: Chico Harlan on: 19.05.2013 [07:48 ] (45 reads)

N. Korea fires 3 short-range guided missiles into its eastern waters, South reports

By Chico Harlan, Published: May 18

TOKYO — North Korea on Saturday launched three short-range guided missiles off its eastern coast, South Korea’s National Defense Ministry said, a test of the tentative calm that has emerged on the peninsula after a period of heightened tensions last month.

Ministry officials said the North fired its missiles toward the northeast — away from the South — where they then dropped into the sea. Japan said the missiles did not fall into its waters.

The North commonly fires off short-range missiles — the previous such launch came two months ago — and analysts said this move was unlikely to rekindle tensions that have abated in recent weeks as Washington and Seoul ponder a new round of talks with Pyongyang.

The South’s Defense Ministry said in a statement released on its official Twitter account that it was “maintaining full readiness” in the event that the guided-missile firing “leads to other provocations or additional missile launches.”

The North launched two missiles in the morning and a third in the afternoon, the South said. The staggered launches could be part of a military training exercise or a simple test of the country’s technology. The North could also be sending a message to the United States, which one week before docked a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, the USS Nimitz, in the South Korean port city of Busan. The North on Monday called the Nimitz’s port call a “fresh tinderbox to escalate the tension.”

An unnamed South Korean official told the Yonhap news agency that the North probably used KN-02 missiles, known for their accuracy and relatively short range — roughly 75 miles, according to the Pentagon.

The North, which has been the target of several rounds of increasingly tough U.N. Security Council sanctions, is banned from testing ballistic missiles. But it routinely ignores the ban for the sake of improving its weapons technology and threatening its neighbors and the United States.

Most of the international attention focuses on North Korea’s long- and intermediate-range weapons, which could be used to strike the U.S. mainland or military bases in Japan and Guam. The North’s stated goal is to equip such missiles with miniaturized nuclear weapons, and U.S. officials are divided on whether Pyongyang already has such a capability.

Over the past seven years, North Korea has launched five long-range missiles or satellite-carrying rockets — most recently in December, when for the first time the authoritarian nation placed a satellite into orbit.

Analysts in Seoul said the North’s latest test-firing is a relatively restrained move, given its pledges weeks earlier to launch preemptive nuclear strikes on the United States and its allies. As tensions soared in early April, the North also placed at the ready on its eastern coast two midrange Musudan missiles, a yet-untested model with an estimated range of 2,000 miles. Those Musudans were later withdrawn.

The launch of the short-range missiles Saturday “is not a matter to which South Korea can turn a blind eye, as it’s a kind of provocation,” said Shin Beom-chul, a researcher at the Seoul-based Korea Institute for Defense Analyses. “The fact that these were not midrange missiles like the Musudan reflects North Korea’s intention to maintain the tension on the peninsula but not raise it to the highest level.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/n-korea-fires-3-short-range-guided-missiles-into-its-eastern-waters-south-reports/2013/05/18/94c8a858-bf9e-11e2-9b09-1638acc3942e_print.html

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Abduction of Syrian Archbishops Targets Eastern Christians, Says Iraqi Group

By , April 26, 2013 8:24 am

The Syriac Gathering Movement, a political party in Iraq, has condemned the kidnapping of Archbishop Yohanna Ibrahim of Aleppo’s Metropolitan of the Syriac Orthodox Church and Archbishop Paul Yazigi, of Aleppo’s Metropolitan of the Greek Orthodox Church.

“The kidnapping of the metropolitans is evidence that the presence of Christians in the East is targeted. It could threaten peace in Syria, as it could sow sedition in the country, undermining the peaceful coexistence between different parties,” the movement said in a statement issued on Wednesday.

The statement demanded the kidnappers not compromise the archbishops’ lives or dignities as they perform a great humanitarian role to serve all people.

It called upon the United Nations and international organizations to put in place measures to prevent future abductions.

“We know very well that the role these bishops are playing in Aleppo is to encourage the Syrian Christians, and strengthen them to remain in their land,” said Bishop Munib Younan of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land, according to Christian ministry SAT-7.

MidEast Christian News

Assyrian International News Agency

Gaza Coastline: Russian Warships Deployed To Eastern Mediterranean

By , November 26, 2012 8:23 pm

Gaza Coastline: Russian Warships Deployed To Eastern Mediterranean
By: Global Research on: 27.11.2012 [01:16 ] (74 reads)

Warships of Russian Black Sea Fleet are ordered to stay in the eastern part of the Mediterranean Sea

Fulfilling orders, a convoy of warships of the Russian Black Sea Fleet arrived in the eastern part of the Mediterranean Sea for a possible evacuation of Russian citizens from the Gaza Strip in case of an escalation of the Palestinian- Israeli armed conflict, a source in the High Command of the Russian Navy told Itar-Tass on Friday.

“The guards missile-carrying cruiser Moskva and the big landing ship Saratov have arrived in the designated area already on November 20, the border patrol ship Smetlivy and the big landing ship Novocherkassk joined the foresaid warships 1-2 days later, after the refuelling from the big sea tanker Ivan Bubnov. The full convoy of the warships of the Black Sea Fleet arrived in the eastern part of the Mediterranean Sea in order to evacuate Russian citizens from the Gaza Strip in case of escalation of the Palestinian- Israeli conflict,” the Russian naval source said.

“It is not ruled out that our warships will be assigned for another combat mission in case of deterioration of the regional situation,” the source in the High Command of the Russian Navy told Itar-Tass. However, the source did not specify what mission in concrete can be set for Russian warships.

Link

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4 US-led soldiers injured in eastern Afghanistan

By , September 10, 2012 6:02 pm

4 US-led soldiers injured in eastern Afghanistan
By: Press TV on: 10.09.2012 [13:39 ] (83 reads)

4 US-led soldiers injured in eastern Afghanistan

A fatally wounded US army soldier is carried to the Medevac helicopter of the 159th Brigade Task Force Thunder on August 24, 2011.

Mon Sep 10, 2012 11:56AM GMT

At least four US-led soldiers have been injured after their tank came under militant attack in Laghman province in eastern Afghanistan, Press TV reports.

The incident occurred late Sunday when foreign forces’ tank was blown up in an attack in the town of Gharghei in Laghman province, which led to the injury of four US-led troops.

Meanwhile, Afghan Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahed claimed responsibility for the offensive, saying the attack killed three foreign soldiers and wounded three others.

Meanwhile another US-led soldier serving with the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) was killed in a bomb attack in southern Afghanistan on Sunday.

Foreign forces suffer the most casualties in spring and summer when attacks by Taliban militants against NATO troops hit their peak.

The high number of military casualties in Afghanistan has intensified opposition in the United States and other members of the Western military alliance of NATO against the protracted war in the country.

According to independent website icasualties.org, at least 326 US-led forces, most of them Americans, have died in Afghanistan so far this year.

A total of 566 US-led forces died in Afghanistan in 2011.

However, 2010 remains the deadliest year for foreign military casualties, with a death toll of 711.

The United States and its allies invaded Afghanistan in 2001 as part of Washington’s so-called war on terror.

http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/09/10/260807/usled-soldiers-injured-in-afghanistan/

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Christianity Faces a Middle Eastern Exodus

By , September 1, 2012 1:32 am

The final outcome of the Arab Spring will not be known for years, perhaps decades, but in the meantime Christian communities across the Middle East continue to wither.

The latest to face a possible exodus are Syrian Christians, many of whom are on the wrong side of the deepening civil war there.

The birthplace of Christianity has held populations of denominations that predate Islam: Maronite, Greek Orthodox, Greek Catholic, Armenian Orthodox, Armenian Catholic, Coptic Orthodox, Syrian Orthodox, Syrian Catholic, Roman Catholic, Chaldean and Assyrian Christian.

But theses churches have never stopped shrinking, in early times because of conversions to Islam to escape discrimination or worse, and more recently from emigration, low birth rates compared to their Muslim neighbors and violence by extremists among them.

A century ago, Christians made up perhaps 1 in 5 of Middle East peoples. Today it’s not even 1 in 20.

Though criticized for their human-rights records, some authoritarian and secular regimes, such Syria’s Assads, ironhandedly crushed most religious strife.

But the toppling of Saddam Hussein of Iraq and Hosni Mubarak of Egypt exposed a tragic result: resurgent Muslim radicals making life harder on the Christians of those lands.

Iraq is the most extreme example; two-thirds of its original 1.5 million Christians have fled homes and churches since U.S. forces invaded nine years ago. In Tunisia, a mob in June beheaded a convert to Christianity. A recent news story reported: “Dozens of Gaza Christians staged a rare public protest … claiming two congregants were forcibly converted to Islam and were being held against their will.”

The Syrian Christians may regret allying with President Bashar Assad against the majority Sunni Muslims. Assad belongs to the ruling Alawite minority, a sect out of mainstream Islam seen by fundamentalist Sunnis as heretical. Alawites make up about 12 percent of the Syrian population, same as Christians.

Some Christians have refused to take sides or have already fled to Lebanon. In Wadi al-Nasara, or the Valley of the Christians, west of Homs, some are fighting beside Alawite loyalists.

“Many Christians in Syria believe that there’s no alternative to the Bashar Assad regime,” Jesuit Father Paulo Dall’Oglio told the Wall Street Journal after being expelled by the government in June. Retribution is expected from the rebel groups supported by radical Wahhabist Muslims in Saudi Arabia.

“We have been leading a life that has been the envy of many,” said Isadore Battikha, who until 2010 served as the Melkite Greek Catholic archbishop of Homs, Hama and Yabroud. “But today fear is a reality.”

A shift in Egypt

Cairo’s once-crowded Coptic quarter is now home to fewer than 50 of their families.

“We know many Christians have left,” said Mounir Ramsis, speaking not only about his quarter but about all of Egypt. “But we love this country and will stay until death.”

An estimated 8 million Christians live among more than 70 million Muslims, but not easily.

Under Mubarak, special presidential permission was needed for churches to be built. That kind of discrimination led Christians to demonstrate alongside Muslims.

The first free elections handed power not to moderates, however, but to Muslim Brotherhood and radical Salafi candidates, who won nearly 70 percent of seats in the parliament and left near-panic in ancient Christian communities.

“If people try to rule the country with the Qur’an, with Shariah law, that means they look to us as second-class people,” said Mina Bouls, a Copt who has fled to America.

The Muslim Brotherhood, which seeks a nation run on Qur’anic law, has said Egypt would respect the rights of religious minorities. The Salafis, Muslim fundamentalists who want a complete application of Shariah law — seen as generally denying equal rights to women and minorities, also assure Copts of their safety.

Coptic Church Bishop Pachomius criticized President Mohammed Mursi, who had pledged to include Copts but swore in a Cabinet with only one. The bishop characterized that woman’s portfolio, scientific research, as a “semi-ministry.”

“In the past, there were fewer ministries,” he said, “and there were two or three Christian ministers.”

He also accused security forces of “standing with their arms crossed” while Muslims attacked Christians outside Cairo. Last year, when Copts protested the failure to investigate the fatal New Year’s Day bombing of an Alexandria church, security forces ran down the Cairo demonstrators with military vehicles, killing 17 more, Human Rights Watch said.

Dwindling numbers

About 13 million Christians account for 4 percent of the people of the Middle East and North Africa, the smallest share of its population that is Christian of any other major geographic region, according to the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life.

Ancient communities face extinction even in Israel, where Christians make up only 2 percent of the population. Nor can the most famous Holy Land towns escape being squeezed and drained by ongoing tension between Israelis and Palestinians. Jerusalem is now 1.5 percent churchgoers, leading some to foresee what would amount to an empty Christian theme park for Western visitors.

The birthplace of Christianity, Bethlehem, is often cited as a parable. Followers of Jesus once made up 90 percent of its people; now it’s 14 percent. The Israeli security wall and checkpoints isolate the city from Christian sites in Jerusalem, just seven miles away. At the same time, the Palestinian Authority has been accused of stealing West Bank land from Christians.

Only in Lebanon, where Christians were once dominant, do they retain considerable political power. After a civil war from 1975-89 largely along religious lines, relations amid the patchwork of religious communities remain delicate. The constitution dictates that the president is always Christian, the prime minister Sunni Muslim and the parliamentary speaker Shia Muslim.

In Jordan, nine of the 110 parliamentary seats are reserved for Christians, who have slipped to just 3 percent of the population.

History unearthed

A hundred yards or so from taxiing airliners, Iraqi archaeologist Ali al-Fatli shows a visitor around the delicately carved remains of a Christian church that may date back 1,700 years.

The church, a monastery and other ruins emerging from the sand with the expansion of the Najaf airport has excited scholars who think it may be Hira, a legendary Arab Christian center.

“This is the oldest sign of Christianity in Iraq,” said al-Fatli, pointing to the ancient tablets with designs of grapes that litter the sand next to intricately carved monastery walls. The site’s stone crosses and larger artifacts have been moved to the National Museum in Baghdad.

Legend traces Christianity in Iraq to Thomas, one of the Twelve Apostles who fanned out to spread Christ’s word after the crucifixion.

Historians believe Hira was founded around A.D. 270. It grew into a major force in Mesopotamia centuries before the advent of Islam, and it reputedly was a cradle of Arabic script.

A professor of early Christianity at London’s School of Oriental and African Studies, Erica Hunter, spoke of evidence that by the early third century, the faith was well established in what is now southern Iraq by the Lakhmid dynasty, an Arab kingdom whose final ruler converted to Christianity.

For centuries Hira was an important center of the Church of the East, sometimes known as the Nestorian church, whose modern offshoot is the Assyrian Church of the East.

It’s clear that Christianity at Hira continued to thrive alongside Islam until at least the 11th century. “In fact, Muslim historians talk of 40 monasteries in the vicinity,” Hunter said.

Eventually the region’s Muslim rulers began persecuting the Christians, and Hira’s churches were abandoned.

History seems to be repeating itself. Many of the people now struggling in Iraq’s Kurdish north came in the wake of a 2010 suicide attack at Our Lady of Salvation Church. That atrocity left 50 worshipers and two priests dead and turned the church into a graveyard of scorched pews and shattered stained glass.

Christian families in Baghdad grabbed clothing, cash and a few other provisions and headed north for the Christian communities along the Nineveh plain and Kurdistan’s three provinces. They joined tens of thousands of other Christians from the capital, Mosul and other cities who traced similar arcs after earlier attacks and assassination campaigns.

“They traded everything for security,” said the Rev. Gabriel Tooma, who leads the Monastery of the Virgin Mary in the Christian town of Qosh, which took in dozens of families.

“We were in the worst of times,” says Younadam Kanna, a Christian in Iraq’s parliament. To him, the discoveries at Hira provide some hope.

“It shows we can live together in peace with Muslims — because we did for centuries before,” he says. “When Islam first came to Iraq, the Christians here welcomed them.”

This article was compiled from a Religion News Service story by Oren Dorell and Sarah Lynch of USA Today; the Wall Street Journal; the Associated Press and other news services.

A region’s 2,000 years of turmoil

Syria was an important backdrop to the development of the region’s once deep Christianity, long before Mohammed’s followers emerged from the deserts of Arabia. Some highlights and low points:

• Antioch, then considered part of Syria, was the scene of early conversions, some by Peter himself, and where the term “Christians” was first tried out.

• The vast Roman Empire was bureaucratically divided between east and west in 285, reunited by Emperor Constantine in 314, then divided again in 395 by Theodosius I. Power shifted from Rome to the wealthier, Greek-oriented Constantinople; Eastern Christians began to grow away from the Roman Church.

• The lands ruled by the Byzantines included those Jesus walked. It was Constantine who restored the name Jerusalem to the Roman town Aelia Capitolina, built atop the ruins of David’s temple. Constantine’s mother, Helena, arrived in 326 to find the “True Cross” and pull down the temples to the old pagan gods. With this kind of royal Eastern Orthodox attention, the town prospered, although not so much the generally mistreated Jews.

Egypt, where Joseph and Mary took Jesus to escape Herod, was regarded as the second Holy Land by the Byzantines. St. Anthony, believed to be the first monk, resided on the Red Sea. Other early monasteries were built where the Holy Family touched down, including St. Mary in Maadi (now a Cairo suburb), where baby Jesus boarded a boat on the Nile.

• The largest church in Lebanon is the Maronite Catholic, traced back to a fourth-century Syrian hermit monk, St. Maron. Another ascetic saint from near Aleppo, Syria, was Simeon Stylites, who lived atop a pillar for 37 years.

• The fellow we know as Santa Claus, that is, fourth-century Saint Nikolaos, built his reputation by leaving gold coins in shoes in Myra (on today’s south coast of Turkey). Beloved by children, sailors and prostitutes, the bishop was credited with many miracles, including resurrecting three children who had fallen afoul of a cannibalistic butcher.

• Constantinople’s crown jewel, the Sofia Hagia cathedral, was finished by Emperor Justinian soon before Rome’s fourth sacking, by the Ostrogoths, in 546.

• By 634, things began to go sour for the Byzantines. Having won a draining war against the Persians, a weakened Emperor Heraclius lost a crucial battle to Arabs south of Damascus. Withdrawing to Antioch, he noted: “Peace be with you Syria. What a beautiful land you will be for our enemies.” It wasn’t long before Jerusalem also fell.

• A small Arab army attacked the Byzantines in Egypt, and by 641, their general reported back to Medina: “We have conquered Alexandria. In this city there are 4,000 palaces, 400 places of entertainment and untold wealth.” The Coptic Church began its long decline.

• In Damascus was a Christian basilica (recycled from a temple to Jupiter) dedicated to John the Baptist and said to still contain the saint’s head. Once Damascus became the seat of a caliphate that ruled from India to Spain, the structure was converted again, to the current Umayyad Mosque. Its tallest tower is the Minaret of Jesus, said by Muslims to be where he will descend to battle the Antichrist in the End Days.

• Although the Byzantine Empire recovered somewhat and held sway in the Balkans over the next centuries, it never retook Asia Minor from the Seljuk armies.

• In 1052 came the Great Schism of Christianity. Rome, restored as the power center of the Catholic world, tried to impose Latin rites on Greek churches in southern Italy; Latin churches in Constantinople were shuttered in retaliation; Pope Leo IX excommunicated Michael Cerularius, patriarch of Constantinople, who in turn did the same to Leo.

• Christian armies, exhorted by Pope Urban II, arrived with the First Crusade and in 1098 captured Antioch. (During this siege, Crusaders discovered the sweet reeds known to Arabs as sukkar (sugar). The next year, the Europeans breached the walls of Jerusalem, herded Jews into a synagogue and set it on fire.

• By 1187, the gains of the first Crusades were largely wiped out by the great Kurdish commander Saladin, who entered Jerusalem on the anniversary of Mohammed’s ascent to heaven. Five years later, he would foil Richard the Lionheart’s Third Crusade to retake the Holy City. (Saladin died soon after and was buried in a Umayyad Mosque garden.)

• In 1204, the French of the Fourth Crusade, assigned to recapture Egypt, pillaged Constantinople instead, a disaster from which the city never recovered. Antioch was ruled by Christians until 1268.

• Constantinople finally fell to the Ottoman Turks in 1453, and Justinian’s great church, the Hagia Sophia, was converted to a mosque.

• The Ottoman Empire lasted until it chose the wrong side in WWI. While it allowed freedom of religion, Christians had second-class status. Whole communities, such as those of the Assyrian Church in southeast Turkey and Maronites in Lebanon, were subjected to massacres in the 1800s.

• During World War I, the Turks tried to exterminate Armenian Christians; one notorious death camp was at Deir el-Zour in the Syrian desert, once famous for its Christian monasteries.

By Darryl Levings
www.kansascity.com

Assyrian International News Agency

US assassination drone crashes in eastern Afghanistan

By , August 23, 2012 1:03 am

US assassination drone crashes in eastern Afghanistan
By: Press TV on: 23.08.2012 [05:56 ] (52 reads)

US assassination drone crashes in eastern Afghanistan

A US assassination drone (file photo)

Wed Aug 22, 2012 9:36PM GMT

A US unmanned aerial vehicle has crashed in Afghanistan’s eastern province of Nangarhar, Press TV reports.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for downing the assassination drone, which went down near Jalalabad Airport on Wednesday.

The US military has also used drones in Somalia, Yemen, Pakistan, Libya, and Iraq.

Washington claims that its airstrikes target militants, but local sources say civilians have been the main victims of the attacks. The United Nations has called the US drone attacks targeted killings that flout international law.

The aerial attacks were initiated by former US President George W. Bush but have been escalated under President Barack Obama.

Insecurity continues to rise across Afghanistan, despite the presence of about 130,000 US-led forces in the war-torn country.

http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/08/22/257636/us-drone-crashes-in-e-afghanistan/

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7.3-magnitude quake strikes Sea of Okhotsk off eastern Russia

By , August 14, 2012 4:48 am

7.3-magnitude quake strikes Sea of Okhotsk off eastern Russia
By: Press TV on: 14.08.2012 [05:55 ] (119 reads)

7.3-magnitude quake strikes Sea of Okhotsk off eastern Russia

Tue Aug 14, 2012 3:58AM GMT

An earthquake measuring 7.3 on the Richter scale has hit Sea of Okhotsk, off Russia’s far east.

The US Geological Survey said the quake struck at 02:59:38 GMT on Tuesday.

No further details have been reported on the incident, yet.

MR/HJL

http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/08/14/256124/strong-quake-hits-area-off-russias-east/

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7.3-magnitude quake strikes Sea of Okhotsk off eastern Russia

By , August 14, 2012 2:06 am

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12 NATO oil tankers torched in eastern Afghanistan

By , July 16, 2012 8:31 pm

12 NATO oil tankers torched in eastern Afghanistan
By: Press TV on: 16.07.2012 [15:27 ] (212 reads)

12 NATO oil tankers torched in eastern Afghanistan

Firefighters extinguish burning NATO supply oil tankers and goods trucks at a terminal following an overnight attack by gunmen in Quetta on December 9, 2011.

Mon Jul 16, 2012 9:22AM GMT

Taliban militants have attacked 12 NATO tankers carrying fuel for US-led forces in eastern Afghanistan, Press TV reports.

Afghan officials said that one driver was killed and four security guards were injured late on Sunday when the militants set the tankers on fire in Sayed-Abad district, Wardak province.

Afghan officials have blamed Taliban for the attack.

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed that the militants have destroyed 25 NATO tankers and killed several drivers as well as security guards.

The attack came days after Islamabad agreed to reopen NATO supply routes into Afghanistan and end the bitter months-long standoff with Washington after US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she was sorry for the death of 24 Pakistani soldiers in a US-led air strike in November 2011.

The move has provoked criticism from Pakistani people who poured into the streets across the country to ask the government to close the routes again.

http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/07/16/251178/12-nato-tankers-torched-in-afghanistan/

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4 NATO service members killed in eastern Afghanistan

By , June 9, 2012 6:43 pm

4 NATO service members killed in eastern Afghanistan
By: ap on: 09.06.2012 [17:28 ] (97 reads)

4 NATO service members killed in eastern Afghanistan

French President Francois Hollande reviews troops at Forward Operating Base in Nijrab, Kapisa region, where most French troops are stationed in Afghanistan, Friday, May 25, 2012. (AP / Joel Saget)
Updated: Sat Jun. 09 2012 04:49:01

The Associated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan — A Taliban suicide bomber disguised as a woman and wearing a burqa blew himself up in a market in eastern Afghanistan on Saturday, killing four NATO troops, officials said.

The international troops were gathered in the main market of Kapisa province’s Nijrab district when the bomber detonated his explosives, said Sediq Sediqi, a spokesman for the Afghan Interior Ministry.

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the attack in an email and said both French troops and Afghan police officers were killed in the explosion.

Sediqi said he had no reports of Afghan policemen being killed, but he said two civilians were wounded.

The majority of NATO troops in Kapisa province are French, but there are also other nations with forces there, including the United States.

The Kapisa bombing was the second deadly attack on NATO troops reported on Saturday. NATO forces said earlier in the day that a service member was killed in a bomb attack in the east. A spokesman for the international coalition, Maj. Martyn Crighton, said the attacks were not related and happened in different parts of the east.

The latest deaths bring to 13 the number of international troops killed in June. So far this year, 189 international service members have been killed in Afghanistan.

France has said it plans to pull its 3,300 troops out of Afghanistan by the end of the year, well before the 2014 goal for the majority of NATO combat troops to have left the country. Kapisa province has been a particularly deadly posting for French troops. In January, an Afghan soldier shot and killed four French troops on a base in the province.

http://calgary.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20120609/taliban-suicide-bomber-120609/20120609/?hub=CalgaryHome

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