Suspected Taliban insurgents fired at a NATO helicopter carrying a provincial governor in southern Afghanistan on Saturday, forcing it to make an emergency landing, a Reuters witness said. The helicopter was flying Helmand governor Golab Mohammad Mangal to Musa Qala in Helmand province when it was hit close to the town, a former Taliban stronghold captured from the insurgents by Afghan, British and U.S. forces in December. "I was the target of this attack. It was the work of the enemies of Afghanistan," Mangal told reporters travelling with him. One of the rotor blades of the Chinook helicopter was damaged in the attack, but none of the passengers were injured. The governor, who had been due to attend a ceremony in the town was quickly flown back to the provincial capital in another aircraft. The British military, which provides the bulk of foreign troops in Helmand, said only that a helicopter from the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) made an unscheduled landing in the Musa Qala area and none of the passengers were hurt. Afghan provincial officials are a frequent target of assassination attempts by the hardline Islamist Taliban in its campaign to oust the pro-Western government and drive out foreign troops. Taliban fighters often shoot rocket-propelled grenades and small arms at the helicopters foreign troops rely on for transport in Afghanistan, but so far lack the surface-to-air missiles which would dramatically alter the balance of power.