http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGBBAJ867DE.htmlKANDAHAR, Afghanistan (AP) - A spate of assaults by suspected Taliban rebels killed four policemen and wounded an election candidate, and Afghanistan warned Sunday that aid workers and other "soft" targets were in danger of attack ahead of elections this month.
The warning came after a string of kidnappings that left a British engineer and two Japanese teachers dead. Five Afghans, including a district governor and an election candidate, were also kidnapped last week. A purported Taliban spokesman claimed to have killed them, though the claim couldn't be independently confirmed.
Interior Ministry spokesman Latfullah Mashal said he was confident the Sept. 18 legislative elections would be successful even though "al-Qaida and the Taliban will try their best to disrupt peace and stability."
"We believe that this will not affect the overall security situation," he told The Associated Press. "They (militants) focus on soft targets attacking candidates, burning schools, aid workers. But the security workers have also taken necessary measures to provide needed security."