Taliban rebels killed eight Afghan police officers today in northern Kunduz, an official said, in what was once a relatively secure part of Afghanistan.
The attack happened just before dawn when the police were asleep, Kunduz Governor Mohammad Omar told reporters. One policeman was wounded and one managed to escape, he said, lowering his earlier death toll of nine.
Residents said there were some casualties among civilians, but details were not immediately available.
The Taliban, largely active in their traditional bastion of support in the south and east, have increased attacks in recent months in some areas of the north despite the presence of some 150,000 foreign forces in the country.
Kunduz has been the focus of attacks in the north and insurgents are increasingly using it as a base to launch attacks elsewhere in the region.
Early this month, a Taliban suicide bomber killed seven policemen in Kunduz. As a sign of their growing strength in the province, the Taliban publicly stoned to death a young woman and a man accused of an illicit affair.
US president Barack Obama has described Afghanistan as his top foreign policy priority and wants to reduce the number of its soldiers in the country by mid 2011.
In the face of rising Taliban attacks, the top US Marine, Gen James Conway, this week said Mr Obama's time line to begin withdrawing troops had given a morale boost to the insurgents who believe they can wait out foreign forces.
With public opinion of the conflict souring as casualties rise, Conway's unusually blunt assessment will likely fan criticism of Mr Obama's war strategy ahead of US congressional elections in November and a strategy review a month later.
Reuters