Special Report: Afghan presidential election |

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Roadside bombs in Afghanistan have killed five more British soldiers, pushing the country's military death toll past 200. The deaths have re-ignited debate about whether the mission there is worth the human cost.
The British Ministry of Defense says three soldiers died after they were attacked while on patrol in Helmand Province on Sunday morning. Two others were killed on Saturday.
This brings Britain's death toll in the country to 204.
Violence in Afghanistan is escalating ahead of Thursday's presidential election. British forces have lost 13 soldiers so far this month, and 22 in July, the deadliest month since 2001.
Gordon Brown, British Prime Minister, said, "It's to the professionalism and the dedication and courage of our troops that we owe the greatest debt and to those families who are suffering today as a result of untold grief because of the loss of loved ones, I want to say that the whole nation supports what their families have been able to do for our country."
Brown described the last few months as "a very difficult summer," but insisted the
troops' presence in Afghanistan was keeping Britain safe.