A string of attacks across the Afghanistan has killed 10, including three NATO service members and five of the Afghan policemen, officials said on Wednesday.
A suicide car bomber blew himself up Wednesday afternoon at a bazaar in the Khost province in the country's east, killing a policeman and an Afghan soldier, provincial police chief Abdul Hakim Eshaqzai said. Four others were injured in the attack in the Dwa Mandala district.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said the insurgent group was responsible for the attack, which targeted the foreigners. He said 14 people were killed and nine others were wounded, but the Taliban regularly exaggerate casualties caused by their attacks.
In the north, four policemen were killed in an ambush Tuesday night as they were driving through Imam Sahib district along the border with the Tajikistan, said Muhbobullah Sayedi, a spokesman for the governor Kunduz province. Violence is on the rise in northern Afghanistan, where pockets of the Taliban insurgents are increasingly targeting government workers.
NATO on Wednesday confirmed the deaths of three coalition service members. Two died in the south — one in a bomb blast Tuesday and another during an insurgent attack on Wednesday. The third coalition service member died Wednesday in fighting in the east.
So far this year, 625 U.S. and international troops have died in the Afghanistan, according to a count by The Associated Press.
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