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Three
U.S. Marines Wounded in Afghan Mine Blast
Sunday, December 16
CAMP
RHINO, Afghanistan (Reuters) - Three U.S. Marines were wounded on
Sunday when one stepped on what appeared to have been a mine while
clearing ordnance from Kandahar airport in southern Afghanistan,
an officer said. One man lost his leg below the knee and was flown
directly to a U.S. military hospital in the Gulf area, the first
serious injury among the Marines since they landed in Afghanistan
three weeks ago. The two others were flown by helicopter for medical
treatment at Camp Rhino, the base south of Kandahar that the Marines
established on November 25, said staff sergeant Daniel Hottle.
The
three were providing security for an explosive ordnance disposal
team that had begun work to make the airport safe for military and
civilian use since the Marines took control of it on Friday, he
said. The incident occurred outside the airport buildings, indicating
the device was a mine rather than a booby trap.
One
of those being treated at Camp Rhino sustained an injury to his
left hand while another was hit by shrapnel in his left ear and
suffered a perforated eardrum as well as a bruise to the shinbone,
Hottle said. ``He may have a loss of hearing from the perforated
eardrum,'' he added. The pair will be sent for further treatment
at a U.S. hospital in the Gulf region.
The
accident occurred at 7:40 a.m. GMT, with the two less seriously
wounded arriving at Camp Rhino in a UH-1N Huey helicopter just over
two hours later.
One
with a bandaged left hand and another holding an intravenous drip
walked out of the back of a military ambulance that had driven them
to the medical tent from the Camp Rhino airfield.
Before
the incident the only injury sustained among the Marines was when
two were slightly hurt when a helicopter crashed at Camp Rhino on
Dec. 6. A CIA agent and a handful of other U.S. military personnel
belonging to various branches of the armed forces have been killed
since the United States launched its offensive in Afghanistan on
Oct. 7.
The
latest injuries have not halted patrols at Kandahar airport, which
was seized by U.S. troops on Friday after fighters loyal to Osama
bin Laden were driven from the bomb-battered runways.
Marines
have been charged with clearing the airport of booby traps and mines
as well as overpowering any al Qaeda or Taliban fighters who may
still be lurking in culverts by the runway.
Work
has also started on a prison camp with facilities to house up to
300 captured fighters of bin Laden's al-Qaeda network.
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