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Wednesday, October 10, 2001, updated at 14:24(GMT+8)
World  

Three Bombs Dropped in Kandahar

US-led jets dropped three bombs Wednesday morning near the airport in the southern city of Kandahar -- the stronghold of the ruling Taliban, according to news reports.

This was the second straight daylight raids in Afghanistan that began Tuesday. The bombs were dropped early morning in the area around Kandahar's airport, one of the positions of Taliban that protects Osama bin Laden, the prime suspect of September 11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington of the United States.

The US-led force began strikes Sunday night and pressed ahead with a promise to get Laden "dead or alive". But Afghanistan responded to US airstrikes with defiance and vowed revenge, pledging over two million Afghan lives in a Jihad (holy struggle) against what it called US "open terrorism."

Mullah Zaeef, Taliban chief representative to Pakistan, told the press here Tuesday that a cruise missile had slammed into a house of Mullah Mohammad Omar, supreme leader of Taliban, but he was not there. He also announced that at least 35 civilians were killed or wounded in the airstrikes.

Another missile hit a demining office in Kabul, killing four guards and seriously injuring others. The UN-funded demining office -- Afghan Technical Consultants (ATC) is located in eastern Kabul's civilian area.

Confirming the deaths, UN spokesman appealed to the US-led force to distinguish "civilians from combatants carrying arms."







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US-led jets dropped three bombs Wednesday morning near the airport in the southern city of Kandahar -- the stronghold of the ruling Taliban, according to news reports.

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