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Eight British soldiers killed in Afghanistan in a day

• Eight UK soldiers killed in 24 hours
• Afghan death toll eclipses that in Iraq
• Brown warns of ‘very hard summer’

Ministers were bracing themselves for an increasingly bloody conflict in Afghanistan as it became clear that a further eight British soldiers have been killed in 24 hours, the worst combat death toll since the war began.

Five troops were killed in a single incident after they were caught in a bomb blast while on foot patrol. Officials confirmed that 15 troops have been killed in the last 10 days. With the government’s handling of the conflict under increasing scrutiny, Gordon Brown was forced to defend the Afghan mission as he left the G8 summit in Italy. Before heading directly to a private briefing at the military’s operational headquarters at Northwood, Middlesex, he warned of a “very hard summer … It’s not over”.

Speaking at a press conference at L’Aquila before the latest deaths had been announced, with his voice faltering Brown voiced his sympathy for the families of those who have died.

He said: “There is a chain of terror that runs from the mountains and towns of Afghanistan to the streets of Britain. Our resolution to complete the work we have started is undiminished.

“It is in tribute to the members of our forces who have given their lives that we should succeed in the efforts we have begun.”

Bob Ainsworth, the defence secretary, said the conflict was “winnable” but warned there would be no early end to the fighting. “I do believe that we are making progress and I do believe that this is winnable, but it is not winnable in the short term,” he told the BBC. “We are going to have to … get behind our armed forces who are doing the brave fighting.”

The daybegan with the confirmation of two deaths in Helmand province the previous day: one from 4th Battalion The Rifles by an explosion while on foot patrol; the second from the Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment, during a battle with insurgents near Lashkar Gah, the provincial capital. Later, a third soldier from the 2nd Royal Tank Regiment was confirmed as having been killed when the Viking armoured vehicle in which he was travelling was hit.

Then there was worse news as it was confirmed that five troops had died and others were injured in a bomb blast. The deaths took the total number of fatalities in Afghanistan to 184, five more than the total lost in the Iraq conflict.

As the death toll grew, there were poignant scenes at Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire as five coffins draped with the union flag arrived at RAF Lyneham and were met by sombre crowds on the town’s streets.

Relatives of lance corporal Dane Elson, 22, from Bridgend, south Wales, of The 1st Battalion Welsh Guards, wept as the hearse carrying his body passed.

His girlfriend, Claire Wells, 23, was ushered forward and placed two roses on the hearse carrying his coffin. Wells said she had planned to live the rest of her life with Elson. “Now I’ll never see him again, I can’t bear it,” she said. Wells added that she did not believe the troops ought to be in Afghanistan. “They are fighting a war that we cannot win,” she said. “There are too many of our lads dying.”

Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat leader, who broke the consensus among party leaders this week when he criticised the government’s strategy in Afghanistan, said: “This tragic milestone must be a reminder to all of us of the huge sacrifices made day after day by our brave service men and women and their families. The courage and professionalism of our armed forces are second to none.”

Bernard Jenkin MP, a member of the Commons defence select committee, said: “It is astonishing that we are fighting high intensity operations the scale of Afghanistan on a peacetime budget without enough protection mobility and with fewer helicopters per head for armed forces than we had three years ago.”

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Parisian gang leader gets life sentence

The leader of a gang who kidnapped a Jewish mobile phone salesman and tortured him to death in one of France’s most gruesome murder cases was tonight sentenced to life in prison.

Youssouf Fofana, 28, went on trial accused of leading 27 others in an elaborate plan to trap the young Jewish man, Ilan Halimi, by enticing him on a date with a woman before holding him hostage in a windowless cellar and torturing him because he believed Jews were “loaded” and would pay a ransom. The case sparked a wave of national soul-searching about anti-semitism in France.

Halimi, 23, was found naked with his head shaved, in handcuffs and covered with burn marks and stab wounds near rail tracks outside Paris in February 2006. In a state of shock and unable to speak, he died en route to hospital. He had been held, tortured and beaten for three weeks, his head wrapped in tape, eyes Sellotaped shut and fed through a straw, while a gang known as “the Barbarians” demanded a ransom from his family.

Police initially did not treat the case as a hate crime. But within days of Halimi’s death his family said he was targeted because he was Jewish. France, still coming to terms with its anti-semitic collaboration of the second world war, was shocked by the gruesome crime. Tens of thousands of people marched against anti-semitism.

Fofana, a charismatic gang leader on a housing estate outside western Paris, had already tried and failed to kidnap people for cash when he spotted Halimi as a target. As the verdict was read out last night, he mimicked applause.

The young woman who agreed to ensnare Halimi in a honey-trap by suggesting the meet and go for a coke, was sentenced to nine years in prison. Now aged 21, she was 17 at the time of the kidnapping and was said to have been persuaded to take part by someone she knew from her children’s home.

Two other men, aged 30 and 23, accused of playing the biggest role in the kidnapping and torture were sentenced to 15 and 18 years.

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French ‘Barbarian’ killer jailed

Youssouf Fofana Fofana at Abidjan airport (March 2005)

The leader of a Paris gang has been sentenced to life in prison in France for the torture and murder of a Jewish man, Ilam Halimi, in 2006.

Youssouf Fofana, 28, the only member of the Barbarians gang to be tried for the murder, will serve at least 22 years.

Mr Halimi was held by the gang for more than three weeks before being found by a railway line. He was handcuffed to a tree, naked and severely burned.

His death prompted mass protests in France against anti-Semitism.

Prosecutors had asked for the maximum sentence for Fofana – the life sentence means he must serve a minimum of 22 years.

The Associated Press reported that he mimed applause when the verdict was given.

Another 26 people were facing charges over involvement in the crime.

Fofana’s two main accomplices received sentences of 15 and 18 years respectively, while a young woman who lured Mr Halimi to his death was given nine years.

Two other defendants were acquitted.

Some of those charged were minors so the trial was heard behind closed door, against Mr Halimi’s family’s wishes.

Death threats

Inside France’s ‘Barbarians’ trial

Ilan Halimi, file image

Mr Halimi, who worked in a mobile phone shop, was lured by a female gang member to an empty apartment in the Parisian suburbs in February 2006.

When he arrived, he was attacked and drugged.

The kidnappers tried unsuccessfully to extort a ransom of 450,000 euros ($600,000; £405,000) from his family, sending them harrowing images and video recordings.

Fofana, who is of Ivorian descent, is said to have targeted Mr Halimi because he believed that "Jews are loaded".

After the murder he fled to Ivory Coast, from where he is reported to have made death threats to Mr Halimi’s family.

He was extradited to France in March 2006 to stand trial. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

New autopsy after French unrest

A second autopsy has been ordered on the body of a young man whose death in police custody has caused three nights of rioting in a southern French town.

Police say Mohamed Benmouna, a 21-year-old of Algerian origin, died after trying to hang himself in a cell earlier this week.

Youths have set shops and cars on fire and battled riot police in the town of Firminy in reaction to the death.

Prosecutor Jacques Pin said he wanted to "remove all doubt" in the case.

A first examination of Mr Benmouna’s body on Thursday showed that he had died from "cardiac arrest by suffocation", he said.

Mr Benmouna had been arrested on suspicion of extortion.

The unrest in Firminy began on Tuesday, when youths burnt cars and threw stones at security forces.

On Thursday, in a third night of violence, several shops were destroyed by fire and police cars were damaged. Police responded with tear gas and said six people had been arrested.

The youths have challenged the official version of Mr Benmouna’s death – that he hung himself with cords from a mattress.

His family have called for calm, but have also filed a complaint to ask for a full investigation.

Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux repeated on Friday that the death had been a suicide.

"He was put in detention, and during his detention, he wanted to commit suicide and unfortunately, he did so," he told French radio.

In 2005, night-time rioting spread across France after two teenagers died in a Paris suburb. Residents said they had trying to escape from police.

The violence mainly affected areas that are home to immigrant communities, many of North African origin.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Holly Cara Price: Michael Jackson: The Love We Save

Death. It’s a whole new media strategy for success. The only problem is, you’re not around to enjoy the spoils.

Bull gores man to death in Spain

A young Spanish man has been gored to death in the traditional running of the bulls in Pamplona, northern Spain. The 27-year-old was gored in the neck on Friday, during the fourth bull run of the week-long San Fermin festival.