Afghanistan's ruling Taliban cranked up their propaganda yesterday, accusing the US of bombing a hospital and using chemical weapons as Britain signalled it might soon send in troops.
The Afghan capital, Kabul, spent its first bomb-free night of the two-week US-led military campaign to capture Osama bin Laden, but the Taliban said at least 50 patients were killed when bombs hit the hospital in the eastern city of Herat.
PHOTO: AFP
"During last night's raids on the 100-bed Herat hospital between 50 to 70 people were killed," Information Ministry official Abdul Hanan Himat said. "All medical equipment and facilities at the hospital were destroyed."
With the source of an anthrax-in-the-mail outbreak in the US still a mystery and the country in the grip of germ warfare jitters, the Taliban also accused the US-led coalition of using chemical and biological weapons.
"Today in my contact with doctors in Herat and Kandahar, they told me that they have found signs that Americans are using biological and chemical weapons in their attacks," Himat said.
Washington immediately denied the charge.
The Taliban also said they had found pieces of a US helicopter near the southern city of Kandahar, and Qatar's al-Jazeera television network showed footage of what it said the Taliban described as new aircraft wheels and a piece of metal stencilled with the English words "Shock. Loud Engineering."
More than 100 US special forces raided a command center near Kandahar used by Taliban spiritual leader Mullah Mohammad Omar and an airfield on Friday and Britain said yesterday its troops were ready to go in at "very short notice."
Speaking after government officials gave the strongest hint yet over the weekend that ground troops might be deployed. Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon declined to say when British troops might be sent.
"I'm not going to put a timescale on that. But certainly we always have troops ready to go at very short notice," he told BBC radio.
Taliban leader Omar praised his forces who he said had "achieved significant successes recently."
"I hope that Almighty Allah will make the Islamic Emirate [Taliban government] victorious over the oppressive American government," the private Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press (AIP) reported him as saying in a statement.
AIP said Omar issued the statement from a location near Kandahar, and he expressed condolences for those killed in US-led air raids or during anti-US protests around the world.
With the leaders of the US-led coalition highlighting the approach of Ramadan and winter in their public comments, the Taliban's civil war foes said that they were preparing a push to recapture the strategic northern town of Mazar-i-Sharif.
One said US advisers had briefed General Abdul Rashid Dostum, who will head any attack on what was once his stronghold.
"Now our troops are readying themselves for a full attack on the town," General Baryalai, a deputy to opposition Defense Minister General Muhammad Fahim, said Sunday.
Northern Alliance commanders say fighters from bin Laden's al-Qaeda network have been gathering in Mazar-i-Sharif, which straddles a key supply route to the Afghan capital Kabul.
US Secretary of State Colin Powell said Washington wanted to see Kabul fall by winter, which is due in the next few weeks.
Washington, its main ally Britain and other nations have been pushing for some form of early agreement on a post-Taliban government.
Afghan factions, fighting over the spoils after forcing the Soviets to withdraw, killed thousands of Kabul residents before the Taliban seized the capital in 1996.
WTO director General Mike Moore meanwhile said trade ministers would hold their meeting on schedule next month in Qatar despite security concerns following the strikes on Afghanistan.
Moore told reporters after meeting Qatari leaders to discuss preparations for the meeting that the level of participation would not be affected by security concerns, adding: "We expect 141 countries to attend."
The meeting is expected to try to launch a new round of global trade talks.
A Chinese aircraft carrier group entered Japan’s economic waters over the weekend, before exiting to conduct drills involving fighter jets, the Japanese Ministry of Defense said yesterday. The Liaoning aircraft carrier, two missile destroyers and one fast combat supply ship sailed about 300km southwest of Japan’s easternmost island of Minamitori on Saturday, a ministry statement said. It was the first time a Chinese aircraft carrier had entered that part of Japan’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ), a ministry spokesman said. “We think the Chinese military is trying to improve its operational capability and ability to conduct operations in distant areas,” the spokesman said. China’s growing
Nine retired generals from Taiwan, Japan and the US have been invited to participate in a tabletop exercise hosted by the Taipei School of Economics and Political Science Foundation tomorrow and Wednesday that simulates a potential Chinese invasion of Taiwan in 2030, the foundation said yesterday. The five retired Taiwanese generals would include retired admiral Lee Hsi-min (李喜明), joined by retired US Navy admiral Michael Mullen and former chief of staff of the Japan Self-Defense Forces general Shigeru Iwasaki, it said. The simulation aims to offer strategic insights into regional security and peace in the Taiwan Strait, it added. Foundation chair Huang Huang-hsiung
PUBLIC WARNING: The two students had been tricked into going to Hong Kong for a ‘high-paying’ job, which sent them to a scam center in Cambodia Police warned the public not to trust job advertisements touting high pay abroad following the return of two college students over the weekend who had been trafficked and forced to work at a cyberscam center in Cambodia. The two victims, surnamed Lee (李), 18, and Lin (林), 19, were interviewed by police after landing in Taiwan on Saturday. Taichung’s Chingshui Police Precinct said in a statement yesterday that the two students are good friends, and Lin had suspended her studies after seeing the ad promising good pay to work in Hong Kong. Lee’s grandfather on Thursday reported to police that Lee had sent
A Chinese ship ran aground in stormy weather in shallow waters off a Philippines-controlled island in the disputed South China Sea, prompting Filipino forces to go on alert, Philippine military officials said yesterday. When Philippine forces assessed that the Chinese fishing vessel appeared to have run aground in the shallows east of Thitu Island (Jhongye Island, 中業島) on Saturday due to bad weather, Philippine military and coast guard personnel deployed to provide help, but later saw that the ship had been extricated, Philippine navy regional spokesperson Ellaine Rose Collado said. No other details were immediately available, including if there were injuries among