NATO says 3 US troops killed in south Afghanistan

Kabul, January 11: Bombs killed an American service member and two Afghan road construction workers in separate attacks in southern Afghanistan, officials said Monday.

The southern half of the country, the Taliban heartland, has seen unrelenting violence as the U.S. military builds up its presence in the area. Most of the 30,000 additional American troops that President Barack Obama has ordered to Afghanistan will be deployed there.

A vehicle carrying the road crew was hit by a roadside bomb Sunday in the Nawa district in Helmand province, according to the Interior Ministry. It said two workers were killed and two were wounded.

The attack occurred a day after a British correspondent and a U.S. Marine were killed by a roadside bomb in the same area.

Sunday Mirror journalist Rupert Hamer, 39, was the first British journalist killed in the conflict.

Hamer and photographer Philip Coburn, 43, were accompanying a U.S. Marine patrol Saturday when their vehicle was hit by a makeshift bomb near the village of Nawa, the British Defense Ministry said. Coburn was seriously wounded.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Monday expressed condolences to the family of the British journalist killed as well as to members of the British media community. Karzai said he appreciated the “brave journalists” who risk their lives in Helmand.

U.S. spokesman Lt. Nico Melendez said an American service member also was killed Sunday in an explosion in southern Afghanistan, but he gave no further details. At least seven American troops have been killed in Afghanistan so far this year, according to an Associated Press tally.

Obama has said U.S. troops will start withdrawing from Afghanistan in July 2011, and American and Afghan officials already are preparing for the transition.

The Afghan government has announced plans to take over the U.S.-run prison at the Bagram air base. No date for the handover, has been set but officials have said it could occur by the end of the year.

The U.S. military opened a new prison to replace the original facility, which was tainted by allegations of human rights abuses.

Navy Vice Adm. Robert Harward, the commander of U.S. detainee operations in Afghanistan, said some prisoners could be held by the U.S. in so-called field detention sites after the handover but they would be turned over to the Afghans upon request.

He also said the cases of a number of non-Afghans in U.S. custody would be reviewed. There are about 750 inmates at Bagram.

“Those will be all under Afghan operations and any U.S. detention will fall under that system,” he said at a press conference.

—Agencies