Suicide bomb, attacks kill 20 in Afghanistan

A suicide bomber killed a state prosecutor and five other people in Afghanistan yesterday, and nearly a dozen people died in other insurgency-linked violence, authorities said.
The suicide bomber, who had explosives strapped to his body and was disguised as a beggar, blew himself up inside a government building in the western province of Nimroz, its governor Ghulam Dastgir Azad said.
The blast brought down the single-storey building in the town of Zaranj on the southwestern border with Iran, Azad told AFP.
"We have recovered so far six bodies," he said. The dead were provincial attorney Anwar Shah Khan, his 20-year-old son, and his deputy and three civilians, Azad said.
"The whole building has collapsed. There might be more casualties," the governor said.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.
There has been a wave of suicide blasts in Afghanistan in the past three years, most of them claimed by Taliban extremists who are waging an insurgency against the US-backed government in Kabul.
Elsewhere in Nimroz, about 150 Taliban militants attacked a police post early Saturday, killing two policemen but losing eight of their own fighters, Azad said.
Also Saturday, insurgents attacked another police post, in Laghman province, near the Afghan capital Kabul, and killed one policeman, provincial police chief Abdul Karim Omeryar said.
The Taliban were in government between 1996 and 2001, when they were ousted in an invasion led by the United States and supported by Afghan anti-Taliban factions.
They have regrouped to put up an insurgency that is said to have support from other extremist factions, including al-Qaeda, and radical elements based across the border in Pakistan.
The Afghan government is supported by about 54,000 soldiers in a Nato-led force and a few thousand more in a separate US-led force as it fights to rebuild its security forces and fight back the extremists.
A top US commander working in Afghanistan, Major General Jeffrey Schloesser, said Friday he needs more troops to counter growing insurgent violence amid signs the rebels were preparing for a winter campaign for the first time.
"I do believe that the level of significant activities, maybe violence, will be higher than any previous winter since 2002," Schloesser said in a video teleconference to Washington from his base in eastern Afghanistan.

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Suicide bomb, attacks kill 20 in Afghanistan

A suicide bomber killed a state prosecutor and five other people in Afghanistan yesterday, and nearly a dozen people died in other insurgency-linked violence, authorities said.
The suicide bomber, who had explosives strapped to his body and was disguised as a beggar, blew himself up inside a government building in the western province of Nimroz, its governor Ghulam Dastgir Azad said.
The blast brought down the single-storey building in the town of Zaranj on the southwestern border with Iran, Azad told AFP.
"We have recovered so far six bodies," he said. The dead were provincial attorney Anwar Shah Khan, his 20-year-old son, and his deputy and three civilians, Azad said.
"The whole building has collapsed. There might be more casualties," the governor said.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.
There has been a wave of suicide blasts in Afghanistan in the past three years, most of them claimed by Taliban extremists who are waging an insurgency against the US-backed government in Kabul.
Elsewhere in Nimroz, about 150 Taliban militants attacked a police post early Saturday, killing two policemen but losing eight of their own fighters, Azad said.
Also Saturday, insurgents attacked another police post, in Laghman province, near the Afghan capital Kabul, and killed one policeman, provincial police chief Abdul Karim Omeryar said.
The Taliban were in government between 1996 and 2001, when they were ousted in an invasion led by the United States and supported by Afghan anti-Taliban factions.
They have regrouped to put up an insurgency that is said to have support from other extremist factions, including al-Qaeda, and radical elements based across the border in Pakistan.
The Afghan government is supported by about 54,000 soldiers in a Nato-led force and a few thousand more in a separate US-led force as it fights to rebuild its security forces and fight back the extremists.
A top US commander working in Afghanistan, Major General Jeffrey Schloesser, said Friday he needs more troops to counter growing insurgent violence amid signs the rebels were preparing for a winter campaign for the first time.
"I do believe that the level of significant activities, maybe violence, will be higher than any previous winter since 2002," Schloesser said in a video teleconference to Washington from his base in eastern Afghanistan.

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বাংলাদেশ মিশনগুলোতে জনবল বাড়াবে সরকার: পররাষ্ট্র উপদেষ্টা

তিনি বলেন, ‘আমরা মানবসম্পদ বাড়ানোর প্রচেষ্টা শুরু করেছি, বিশেষ করে আমাদের কনস্যুলার পদগুলোতে। আশা করছি এই প্রচেষ্টায় অন্তত আংশিক সাফল্য পাব।’

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