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3 German Soldiers Killed in Afghanistan

"The German military is carrying out an important mission for the reconstruction and stabilization of Afghanistan. It is the goal of the attackers to destroy the established successes of this rebuilding process," she said in a statement.

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said the attack "underscores that there is no quiet or safe zone" in Afghanistan.


A German soldiers lies injured after a suicide bomb attack in Kunduz Afghanistan in this image taken from TV Saturday May 19, 2007. A suicide attacker detonated himself next to German soldiers shopping in a crowded market in northern Afghanistan on Saturday, killing 10 people and wounding 16, officials said. Three Germans were killed and two wounded in the attack, said police Seven civilians were killed and 15 wounded, including seven seriously, the Interior Ministry said. (AP Photo/Ariana TV via AP Television)
A German soldiers lies injured after a suicide bomb attack in Kunduz Afghanistan in this image taken from TV Saturday May 19, 2007. A suicide attacker detonated himself next to German soldiers shopping in a crowded market in northern Afghanistan on Saturday, killing 10 people and wounding 16, officials said. Three Germans were killed and two wounded in the attack, said police Seven civilians were killed and 15 wounded, including seven seriously, the Interior Ministry said. (AP Photo/Ariana TV via AP Television) (AP)

Although attacks in the north are rare, it was the second in a little more than a month in Kunduz. On April 16, a suicide bomber blew himself up on a police training field, killing 10 Afghan policemen and wounding 40 others. The Taliban also claimed responsibility for that attack.

The attack brings to 53 the number of international troops killed in Afghanistan this year, including 25 Americans.

Elsewhere, militants attacked U.S.-led coalition and Afghan forces about 60 miles northeast of Kabul, sparking a rare gunbattle close to the capital that killed about 20 militants and three civilians, officials said Saturday.

Afghan and allied forces were on combat patrol late Friday in the al-Asay Valley in Kapisa province, which borders Kabul province, when they were ambushed, the U.S. coalition said. The militants placed roadside bombs along the route in a "failed attempt to trap" coalition forces, a coalition statement said. Fighter aircraft then fired on the militants, the statement said.

The coalition said estimated that several dozen fighters were killed during the fight and there were no reports of civilian casualties.

Gov. Abdul Satar Murad, the governor of Kapisa province, said about 20 fighters were killed, as well as two women and a child.

While fighting in southern and eastern Afghanistan has picked up in recent weeks, battles so close to the capital are considerably rarer.

The coalition, meanwhile, said about 20 Taliban fighters ambushed coalition soldiers and Afghan police patrolling near the Pakistan border in the eastern province of Paktia on Friday, sparking an eight-hour battle that killed "a significant number of insurgents."

In eastern Afghanistan, a remote-control bomb exploded Saturday next to a police convoy, killing a district police chief and his driver and wounding three policemen in the Achen district of Nangarhar province, said Ghafar Khan, spokesman for the provincial police chief.

The attack happened as police were on their way to eradicate poppies, Khan said.

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Associated Press Writer David Rising in Berlin contributed to this report.


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© 2007 The Associated Press