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Peacekeepers under fire

SUMMARY:

Members of the International Security Assistance Force came under fire Saturday for the first time in the Afghan capital of Kabul when an unidentified gunman in a car sped past a British security post and began shooting.

The ISAF confirmed that six British paratroopers returned fire and were withdrawn from the security post after the incident. None of them was injured.

But a Kabul resident disputed ISAF's account, telling Associated Press Television that he was in a car trying to take a pregnant woman to a hospital when the paratroopers fired without provocation.

A later search of the scene uncovered one person dead and five others with injuries at a nearby private home. Authorities refused to comment on the cause of death but did say that those injured had not been injured by gunfire. (Full Story)

Meanwhile, the leader of Afghanistan's interim government, Hamid Karzai, said Friday that 20 suspects have been linked to the assassination of Minister of Civil Aviation and Tourism Abdul Rahman.

Rahman was stabbed to death Thursday. Officials originally had said he was beaten to death by Hajj pilgrims frustrated at having to wait up to two days to get a plane to Mecca, Saudi Arabia.

Among the suspects are five senior military and defense officials in Karzai's government, including the head of the Intelligence Ministry, Gen. Abdullah Tawhedi; the technical deputy of the Ministry of Defense, Gen. Qalander Big; and a Supreme Court justice, Haji Halim.

Zalmay Khalilzad, President Bush's special envoy to Afghanistan, who spoke with Karzai on Friday, said the suspects have long had a vendetta against Rahman, who had broken away from the Northern Alliance.


  •  Summary

  •  Update

  •  Key questions

  •  Who's who


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UPDATE:

Pakistan's interior minister, Moinuddin Haider, said Saturday that two more people have been detained for questioning in the kidnapping of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl. Haider announced the news at a meeting of government officials in Lahore. (Full Story)

The FBI's National Infrastructure Protection Center and the Food Marketing Institute signed an agreement Friday to form a center aimed at protecting the nation's food supply from tampering. Industry Security and Analysis Centers have already been established in other critical sectors, including electric power, banking and finance, telecommunications, and water. (Full Story)

U.S. intelligence officers are investigating whether a shipment of illicit Afghan drugs recovered at sea on Wednesday may be linked to al Qaeda or Taliban activities. Military officials tell CNN on Friday the drugs were in plastic packages stamped with the words "Freedom of Afghanistan."

Yemeni and U.S. officials are discussing the imminent deployment of U.S. special forces to the Middle Eastern country, the latest joint endeavor between the two countries in the U.S.-led war against terrorism. (Full Story)

In the United States, John Walker Lindh will face trial August 26 on 10 counts that stem from his fighting with the Taliban in Afghanistan, a federal judge ruled Friday in Alexandria, Virginia. (Full Story)

KEY QUESTION:

Can the chief suspect in Daniel Pearl's abduction be believed?

WHO'S WHO:

Abdul Rahman: Afghanistan's Minister of Civil Aviation and Tourism who was killed Thursday. Hamid Karzai, the leader of Afghanistan's interim government, called the killing an "assassination" and said that five senior government officials were involved.

Daniel Pearl: A 38-year-old reporter for The Wall Street Journal who was abducted January 23 in Karachi, Pakistan. A group calling itself the National Movement for the Restoration of Pakistani Sovereignty claims it is holding him and is threatening to kill him unless the United States meets its demands to release Pakistanis captured in the U.S. war on terror.



 
 
 
 






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