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NATO Chopper Down In Afghanistan, Seven Soldiers Dead

A Chinook helicopter.

US defense secretary to visit Kyrgyzstan in June
Bishkek (AFP) May 31 - US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates is due to visit Kyrgyzstan in early June for talks on boosting security and bilateral ties, the US embassy here said Wednesday. Gates is also scheduled to inspect the US base on the grounds of the former Soviet republic's Manas airport, and meet with its commanders and staff. Manas Air Base provides logistical support to coalition forces stationed in nearby Afghanistan and has played a crucial role since the November 2005 closure of a US air base in Uzbekistan.
by Staff Writers
Kabul, Afghanistan (AFP) May 31, 2007
A helicopter carrying NATO-led military in Afghanistan went down late Wednesday, with seven soldiers "known dead," the force said as the Taliban claimed to have shot down the chopper. The International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) did not refer to the Taliban claim in a statement that announced the deaths but said the cause of the crash was being determined by military officials.

"Seven ISAF soldiers are known dead after a Chinook helicopter flying an ISAF mission went down in Helmand province near Kajaki just after 9:00 pm (1630 GMT)," it said.

The location was the same as that given by the insurgent Taliban movement, which is confirmed to have brought down only one military aircraft in Afghanistan.

"The entire crew of five died in the incident. There were also two military passengers who died," ISAF said in a statement.

The 37-nation ISAF does not release the nationalities of its casualties until their home nations have done so.

Most of the 5,200 British troops in Afghanistan under ISAF are in Helmand.

A unit that responded to the scene of the crash was ambushed by "enemy fighters," the statement said. "Under continued fire, the responding patrol called for an airstrike to eliminate the enemy threat."

An Afghan civilian was injured by gunfire after the crash, it said.

Taliban spokesman Yousuf Ahmadi said "our Taliban brothers" had shot down an aircraft, which he said appeared to be a Chinook, in Kajaki in Helmand.

The twin-engined Chinook transport helicopters can carry up to 30 people and are in regular use over Afghanistan.

"The helicopter burst into flames in the sky and then crashed. It seems that no one on board could have survived," Ahmadi said.

"The foreign troops have cordoned the area and are in control of the crash site so we cannot have access to the area to determine the number of casualties," he told AFP by telephone.

He said he did not yet know exactly how the aircraft had been brought down.

Taliban fighters have anti-aircraft weapons from the "jihad time," the period of resistance to the Soviet occupation of the 1980s, he told AFP.

Also, "they have received new anti-airplane weapons."

"At this stage I don't have the exact information which weapons they used to bring down the aircraft," he said.

The insurgent movement has previously claimed to have shot down foreign military aircraft but this has mostly been rejected by the international forces which have, however, lost several aircraft to accidents or technical failures.

In one incident acknowledged to have been caused by Taliban, militants used a rocket-propelled grenade to shoot down a US Chinook helicopter in Kunar in June 2005, killing all 16 soldiers on board, eight of them US Navy SEALs.

It was the first downing of a US helicopter by hostile fire in Afghanistan and the biggest toll for US forces from a single attack since the Taliban regime was toppled in a US-led invasion in late 2001.

There have been suspicions that the militants, who are allied with Al-Qaeda, are trying to acquire shoulder-fired anti-aircraft weapons for their fight against the NATO force and the separate US-led coalition.

In March this year, the coalition said it carried out precision air strikes on Taliban militants who had been helping to move anti-aircraft weapons in Helmand, killing some of them.

Helmand has seen a surge in military and Taliban activity this year with hardcore Taliban said to be allied with drugs barons and foreign fighters in the province, the country's top opium producer.

The latest deaths take to 73 the number of foreign soldiers killed in Afghanistan this year, most of them in combat.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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EU-Japanese Efforts To Stabilise Central Asia No Threat To Russia
Berlin (AFP) May 29, 2007
The European Union and Japan agreed on Tuesday to work towards fostering stability in the energy-rich but underdeveloped Central Asian countries but stressed their efforts did not threaten Russia. The talks, led by German Foreign Frank-Walter Steinmeier and his Japanese counterpart Taro Aso, focused on how to help countries such as Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan secure water supplies and improve their healthcare systems.







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