Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Afghan leader issues ban on private security firms AP

KABUL, Afghanistan Afghanistans president has issued a decree formalizing a four-month deadline for private security companies to disband.

The decree issued Tuesday says that private security contractors working in Afghanistan will have to either join the Afghan police force or cease operations.

The decree provides an exception for private security firms working inside compounds used by embassies, international organizations and all non-governmental organizations.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. APs earlier story is below.

KABUL, Afghanistan AP � Bomb attacks killed three U.S. service members and two Afghan civilians in Afghanistan on Tuesday, officials said.

The deaths � in eastern and western Afghanistan � were a reminder that the Afghan war continues to be violent far from the southern Taliban strongholds currently targeted by a surge of U.S. troops. Recent months have been particularly deadly for both NATO forces and Afghan civilians countrywide.

Two of the Americans were killed in a bombing in the east, while the third was killed in the west, NATO said. It did not provide details on where or how they were attacked. Including these deaths, 15 U.S. service members have been killed so far this month.

Meanwhile, a bomb hidden on a motorbike killed two Afghan street cleaners early Tuesday in eastern Ghazni province.

The bomb, which was remote-detonated, appeared to be targeting a police truck that was driving down the street in Ghazni city, said Ismail Jahangir, a provincial government spokesman.

While it wounded one police officer, the explosion killed two civilian city workers who were cleaning up trash on the street, Jahangir said. An additional four civilians were wounded, he said.



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