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Six Afghan police found shot dead in Helmand

Zarvan

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Six Afghan policemen have been found shot dead at a checkpoint in southern Helmand province, in what officials believe was an insider attack.

Provincial officials told the BBC that a policeman killed six colleagues and fled with weapons and a vehicle.

The Taliban said the policeman had been recruited by them for the attack.

While many Nato soldiers have been killed in insider attacks, analysts believe most of the casualties occur within the ranks of Afghan forces.

Earlier this week a policeman opened fire and killed seven colleagues in the Gereshk district of Helmand.

Omer Zowak, the spokesman for the provincial governor, told the BBC that the latest attack had taken place in the volatile Sangin district of Helmand.
BBC News - Six Afghan police found shot dead in Helmand
 
. . .
Six Afghan policemen found shot dead at checkpoint
AP

KABUL: Six Afghan policemen were found shot at their checkpoint in the country's south and two other policemen were missing, raising suspicions they killed their comrades, an official said Thursday.

District chief Nayamatullah Samim said the policemen's bodies were discovered in the shelter near their checkpoint Wednesday night, after they did not check in with their superiors.

Two other officers assigned to the checkpoint were missing, along with vehicles and weapons.

''We don't know yet whether these two missing men are the ones who killed the police or if they were taken by other attacks,'' Samim said.

So-called ''insider attacks'' in which Afghan forces open fire on their comrades or international forces threaten to shake the confidence of the two sides as the 2014 withdrawal of most of the international troops approaches.

Taliban insurgents have warned they would infiltrate Afghan security forces to carry out insider attacks. There have been several such attacks in the past year, including officers poisoned while eating.

The most recent such attack was May 28, when two recently rehired Afghan police opened fire on their commander at a checkpoint in a remote district in the country's south, killing him and six of his men before fleeing in a police vehicle with weapons.

On May 5, an Afghan soldier turned his weapon on two US Marines he was working with and killed them.

The insurgents have stepped up attacks across the board in recent weeks, bringing violence to among the highest levels of the 12-year war as they seek to weaken the government and security forces.

Foreign troops have been pulling back from front-line fighting in preparation for the international coalition turning over full responsibility for security to Afghan units later this year.
 
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