The Taliban yesterday captured a district in Afghanistan’s northeastern Kunduz province, near the provincial capital where militants scored their biggest victory in 14 years last September.
The militants, waging a bloody insurgency to topple the Western-backed Kabul government, have intensified their attacks nationwide and tightened their grip on the besieged capital of Helmand province southwest of Kunduz in recent weeks.
Khan Abad district, which is around 30km east of Kunduz city, fell to the Taliban after they launched a pre-dawn attack on the district centre, according to local officials.
“After several hours of fighting the militants overran the district,” the district’s governor Hayatullah Amiri said, adding that the provincial governor ignored their calls for reinforcements.
Provincial spokesman Sayed Mahmood Danish confirmed the overnight battle, and said security forces were “trying to get back control of the district from the Taliban”.
Khan Abad resident Abdul Satar said hundreds had fled their homes amid the fighting.
“The residents of the city are worried about their lives and safety. People are fleeing their homes and they have left their shops,” he said, adding that roads to neighbouring provinces were closed.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid confirmed in a statement the group’s fighters were in control of district and police headquarters.
Meanwhile, a roadside bomb ripped through a civilian vehicle in neighbouring Takhar province killing four people and wounding two others, Sunatullah Temor, a government spokesman for the province, said.
Civilians are bearing the brunt of conflict in Afghanistan, with casualties soaring to a record high in the first half of 2016, according to a recent UN report.
Between January and June, 1,601 civilians were killed and 3,565 were wounded – a 4% increase in casualties compared to the same period last year.
Deaths from the conflict have reached their highest level since the UN began issuing its reports in 2009.
The Taliban briefly captured northern Kunduz city in September last year, the first city to fall to the insurgents in their biggest victory in 14 years of war.
The militants were driven out almost two weeks later by Afghan forces backed by US aircraft and Nato soldiers, but it marked the first time since 2001 that the Taliban were able to take control of a major city in the country.
After the brief Kunduz takeover, US and Afghan officials insisted that they would not allow another urban centre to be captured.
Earlier this month, the Taliban launched a major offensive in volatile southern Helmand province, surrounding the capital Lashkar Gah, a town of 200,000 inhabitants, but were stopped by Afghan forces supported by American air strikes.
The fighting in Helmand and Kunduz come as Afghan troops are stretched on multiple fronts across Afghanistan – including eastern Nangarhar province where the Islamic State group is making inroads.


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