Al
Jazeera.net
Monday, December 4, 2006
Nato has lost contact with one of its chartered helicopters
travelling from Kandahar to Tirin Kot base in the Uruzgan province
of Afghanistan.
Taliban fighters claim to have downed the aircraft, a Russian
MI25, using a rocket.
Nato's International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) could not
confirm that the helicopter had been shot down.
A spokesman said: "Searches are continuing to find the craft."
The MI25 helicopter, the largest Russian cargo helicopter in existence,
was manned by a Russian crew and used to supply Dutch military
bases in Afghanistan.
The helicopter left Kandahar on Saturday carrying supplies but
no personnel.
An Al Jazeera film crew had travelled in the aircraft less than
24 hours before it went down.
Al Jazeera correspondent James Bays said: "Although the MI25
seemed serviceable, we were disturbed that the Russian crew did
not ask us to fit our seat belts and a lot of the cargo was not
strapped down properly - it was allowed to move freely around
the hold."
He said that although the Taliban has claimed responsibility for
shooting down the aircraft, the helicopter had been flying in
bad weather.
In another incident, the Taliban says it has carried a suicide
car bombing that killed at least eight people in an attack against
Nato troops in Kandahar on Sunday.
The bomber attempted to ram a military convoy in his car.
Three Nato soldiers were wounded and the blast damaged an open-topped
Nato vehicle.
Three Afghan's were reported killed in the violence, while 19
people, including the three Nato soldiers, were wounded in the
ensuing gunfire.
Troops are accused of firing on civilian vehicles as they moved
away from the explosion.
Nato is investigating whether its troops fired on civilians. Nato
spokesman Major Luke Knittig said: "We will establish the
facts.
"It is still unclear in what way the troops reacted."
Almost 4,000 people, about a quarter of them civilians, have been
killed in fighting this year in Afghanistan.