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J-10
06-11-2004, 04:17 AM
Two arrested over slaying of Chinese workers as bodies brought to Afghan capital

By AMIR SHAH
The Associated Press
6/11/04 3:41 AM

KUNDUZ, Afghanistan (AP) -- Two men were arrested Friday over the slaughter of 11 Chinese road workers in northern Afghanistan, the deadliest attack on foreign civilians since the fall of the Taliban.

Three more suspects were being sought, Gen. Mohammed Daoud told The Associated Press after he watched planes depart for the Afghan capital carrying the bodies of the dead and five wounded.

The contractors were slain early Thursday when assailants crept up to their tents in a desert camp 150 miles north of Kabul and shot them as they slept. The camp's sole armed guard was also killed.

The attack was the worst in a series against relief workers, private contractors and staff preparing for U.N.-sponsored elections, threatening already slow reconstruction efforts in this war-wrecked country as well as the planned September vote.

On Friday, two Afghan army helicopters brought the bodies from Kunduz to Kabul airport. Grim-faced Chinese Embassy staff helped medical workers carry the green plastic body bags to a line of ambulances, which took them to the morgue at the city's military hospital.

Daoud, the de facto ruler of Kunduz and several neighboring provinces, denounced "the enemies of Afghanistan" -- a stock Afghan phrase encompassing Taliban and al-Qaida rebels and followers of renegade warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.

But he also suggested thieves might have been responsible and it was "too early to blame anybody."

Daoud said a detachment of his soldiers were now guarding the camp of the China Railway Shisiju Group, which evacuated some 80 Chinese to Kunduz late Thursday. Many had arrived in the country only the day before.

The company last year won a $22.5 million World Bank contract to rebuild a highway from Doshi, in Baghlan province, to the Tajik border as part of plans to reopen trade routes and revive the Afghan economy.

Other reconstruction projects, such as the main highway from Kabul to Kandahar, have gone ahead only under tight security for fear of Taliban-led militants waging a stubborn insurgency across the south and east.

In China, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said Chinese companies, which are also working on irrigation projects, would not be forced out of Afghanistan but would need better protection.

President Hamid Karzai, speaking to reporters during a trip to the United States, condemned the attack and urged the Chinese reconstruction teams to stay.

"I want them to continue to do their work," he said. "I want them to be brave and not lose heart and be with us, and I want them to stay and continue to rebuild Afghanistan."

Ordinary Afghans also feared that badly needed rebuilding work will dry up.

"They were just innocent workers," said Mohammed Naim, one of about 30 turbaned tribal elders who came to the airport in Kunduz to pay their respects. "We hope the Chinese government doesn't stop the work. Our roads are very bad."

From (http://www.nj.com/breakingnews/index.ssf?/cgi-free/getstory_ssf.cgi?a0446_BC_Afghan-ChineseKilled&&news&tradecentercrash)

J-10
06-11-2004, 04:23 AM
Chinese workers massacred; Taliban suspected

Attack in Afghanistan came as men slept.

By Carlotta Gall
The New York Times

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- The massacre of 11 Chinese road construction workers and an Afghan guard as they slept in their tents early Thursday was the deadliest against foreigners since the fall of the Taliban.
The violence dealt a setback to U.S. efforts to stabilize the country ahead of September elections.

The men were among more than 100 Chinese engineers and construction workers who had recently arrived in Afghanistan to work on a World Bank project to rebuild a road from Kabul north to the Tajikistan border. The attack occurred at 1:30 a.m. about 20 miles south of Kunduz, Afghan officials said. A group of some 20 gunmen in cars attacked the men as they slept, said the spokesman for the Interior Ministry, Lutfullah Mashal.

The Afghan guard and nine Chinese men were killed immediately in the attack. Two more Chinese men died in the hospital later. Four other Chinese workers were wounded, said the Kunduz police chief, Gen. Abdul Mutalibeg. A second Afghan guard was missing, he said.

Afghan officials attributed the attack to the Taliban. Coming after the murder of five aid workers last week in northwestern Afghanistan, the attack may indicate a shift to northern Afghanistan, which has been relatively free of violence.

A senior Afghan military commander in southern Afghanistan, Haji Mir Wali, said Mullah Dadullah, one of the top Taliban commanders, recently ordered his fighters to strike at road builders.

A spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, Liu Jianchao, said the workers were members of a railroad construction company that has 123 people in Afghanistan. He condemned the attack as a "brutal terrorist act' and vowed that Chinese civil engineering projects there would continue

From (http://www.presstelegram.com/Stories/0,1413,204~21474~2205249,00.html)

J-10
06-11-2004, 04:24 AM
China vows to bring terrorists to justice


  UNITED NATIONS, June 10 (Xinhuanet) -- China's ambassador to the United Nations Wang Guangya said here Thursday that China is "proud of its anti-terror policy" and will stick to it despite a deadly attac k that killed 11 Chinese workers in Afghanistan.

"The Chinese government strongly condemns this terrorist attacks aimed at Chinese construction workers who are in Afghanistan, helping the Afghanistan people," he told reporters after a closed meeting by the UN Security Council.

Asked whether this attack would have any percussions on China's anti-terrorism policy, he said: "We are proud of our anti-terrorism policies... and we would continue to join international efforts in the fight against terrorism."

"I think we should join hands to fight terrorist activities wherever they occur," he noted.

As for whether China will send troops to the war-torn country, Wang said his delegation is contacting the UN mission there to seek protection of Chinese workers.

"I am in contact with UNAMA (UN Assistant Mission in Afghanistan) and the International Security Assistance Force," he said. "This morning I had a special meeting with German ambassador. They have forces in the region, and they agreed to send their forces to protect the Chinese construction workers."

At present, the Chinese government is doing everything possible to help the victims and their families, Wang said.

"My government is also in contact with the government of Afghanistan and UNAMA (UN Assistant Mission in Afghanistan), urging them to carry out a thorough investigation and bring those accountable to justice," he said. Enditem

From (http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2004-06/11/content_1519893.htm)