Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Roadside bomb kills Afghan district chief: official

The governor, aged in his early 30s, was driving to work when his vehicle hit the device, Ahmadi said. - File Photo

KANDAHAR: A roadside bomb killed an anti-Taliban district governor and two of his bodyguards on Wednesday in southern Afghanistan’s volatile Helmand province, an official said.
The governor of Khan Neshin district, Massoud Khan, was a fierce opponent of drug smugglers and the Taliban, who issued him with death threats, provincial spokesman Daud Ahmadi told AFP.
The governor, aged in his early 30s, was driving to work when his vehicle hit the device, Ahmadi said.
“The district governor Massoud Khan along with two bodyguards were martyred in the blast,” Ahmadi said, adding that two other bodyguards were also wounded.
The Taliban was not immediately reachable for comment but roadside bombs are the weapon of choice for the militants in their decade-long insurgency against international forces and the Kabul government.
Parts of Helmand remain highly unstable although provincial capital Lashkar Gah is under the control of Afghan forces and three other districts are due to switch from Nato to Afghan security control.
There are around 140,000 international troops, mainly from the United States, in Afghanistan helping government forces combat the insurgency.

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