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by AFP Staff Writers Beirut (AFP) Sept 15, 2021
Air strikes from unidentified drones killed three pro-Iran fighters in Syria's eastern province of Deir Ezzor near the Iraqi border, a Britain-based war monitor said on Wednesday. The drones late Tuesday targeted trucks of the Iraqi paramilitary network Hashed al-Shaabi after they had crossed the border into the Syrian border district of Albu Kamal, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. Three were killed and several severely wounded, the monitoring group said. A source within the Hashed al-Shaabi in Iraq however said that "the strikes destroyed four vehicles, but no one was killed". "The site targeted was near a border post of the factions on the Iraqi-Syrian border," the source told AFP. The Fatah alliance, the political wing of the Hashed al-Shaabi, condemned an "abject attack" on its forces on the frontier. It called on Iraq's government and parliament to "determine the countries responsible" and confront them. Iran-backed groups, including the Hashed al-Shaabi, are present near the Iraqi border in Syria's far east. The strikes on Albu Kamal come after a drone attack late Saturday against the Arbil international airport, which includes an air base of the US-led coalition that has been fighting the Islamic State group. There were no casualties in the attack on the base in Iraqi Kurdistan. Attacks of this kind, normally targeting US troops or US interests in Iraq, have become common in recent months. Although no one claims responsibility for them, Washington blames pro-Iranian forces in Iraq. The United States has twice conducted deadly strikes against the Hashed al-Shaabi in eastern Syria since President Joe Biden took office, in February and June this year. Israel has carried out hundreds of air strikes on Syrian territory, targeting regime positions as well as allied pro-Iran forces since the start of the decade-old Syrian war.
One dead as Shining Path guerilla group remnants clash with Peru soldiers Lima (AFP) Sept 14, 2021 A suspected Shining Path guerilla was killed in clashes with soldiers and police in a remote coca leaf growing region of Peru's high jungle, the country's military said Monday. The Shining Path spread terror in Peru in the 1980s and 1990s and was largely destroyed by the 2000s, but a rump group fled to the mountainous eastern slopes of Peru's Andes and authorities say they work as hired guns for drug traffickers growing coca, the source plant of cocaine. Armed forces and police members killed "a ... read more
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