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NATO says person wearing an Afghan police uniform has shot dead 2 service
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By Associated Press, Monday, April 4, 6:08 AM


KABUL, Afghanistan - A person wearing an Afghan border police uniform shot
dead two NATO service members Monday inside a compound in northern
Afghanistan, the military alliance said.

/ The Associated Press - Afghan protestors burn an effigy of U.S. President
Barack Obama during a demonstration in Jalalabad, Afghanistan on Sunday,
April 3, 2011. Afghan protests against the burning of a Quran in Florida
entered a third day with a demonstration in the major eastern city Sunday,
while the Taliban called on people to rise up, blaming government forces for
any violence. (AP Photo/Rahmat Gul) 

NATO stressed that it was still investigating the incident in Faryab
province. Authorities said the shooter fled the scene. The military
coalition did not provide further details.

It was not immediately clear if the shooter was an Afghan police officer.
There have been incidents of both Afghan security forces turning on their
Western counterparts and of insurgents donning uniforms to infiltrate bases
and attack from the inside.

The investigation was being undertaken along with Afghan authorities. Afghan
Interior Ministry spokesman Zemeri Bashary said that the shooting occurred
in the provincial capital of Maymana but declined to provide further
details.

Turncoat attacks by Afghan police and soldiers have appeared to increase
over the past 12 months as NATO and Afghan forces work more closely
together. In some cases, such shootings have been a result of arguments that
turned violent; in others, the Taliban has claimed that Afghan shooters were
sleeper agents.

In the last such incident in January, an Afghan soldier approached two
Italian soldiers who were cleaning their weapons and shot both of them dead
before escaping from the base. One of the deadliest such shootings occurred
in November when an Afghan border police officer opened fire on NATO troops
during a training mission in eastern Nangarhar province, killing six NATO
service members before he was shot dead.

The shooting came as protests erupted in Afghanistan again Monday against a
Florida pastor's burning of the Quran, making four straight days of
demonstrations - some deadly - against the destruction of Islam's holy book.
At least 21 people have been killed in the past three days of protests
across the country.

The violence was set off by anger over the March 20 burning of the Quran by
a Florida church - the same church whose pastor had threatened to do so last
year on the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, triggering worldwide
outrage.

The Quran burning appears to have inflamed a simmering anti-foreigner
sentiment in the country, where anger about civilian casualties and
international contractors making fortunes off the long-running conflict have
worn down the welcome for Western forces over more than nine years of
fighting.

Monday's protest in eastern Laghman province briefly threatened turn into
another melee as about 300 protesters brandished sticks and threw stones at
police, who in turned started firing shots in the air, according to an
Associated Press photographer at the scene.

The protest started in Alingar district and the shouting crowd moved toward
the provincial capital of Mihtarlam, where they clashed with officers who
wanted to keep them out of the city, said Gen. Abdul Aziz Gharanai, the
provincial police chief.

However, the protesters dispersed as officers started firing warning shots
and no one was wounded, Gharanai said. The AP photographer also heard no
reports of serious injuries.

The violence started Friday when thousands of demonstrators in the
previously peaceful northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif poured into the streets
after Friday's Muslim prayer services and overran a U.N. compound, killing
three U.N. staff members and four Nepalese guards.

Meanwhile, NATO also said one of its service members was killed Sunday in an
insurgent attack in the east. NATO did not disclose other details or the
nationality of the dead. The majority of the troops in the east are
American.

The latest deaths makes a total of 104 NATO service members killed so far
this year. In the same period of 2010, 129 NATO troops died.

 



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