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Monday, August 9, 2021

Taliban takes 2 more provincial capitals in relentless Afghanistan offensive - CBC.ca

The Taliban took control of two more provincial capitals in Afghanistan on Monday, officials said. Their fall marked the latest development in a weeks-long, relentless Taliban offensive as American and NATO forces finalize their pullout from the war-torn country.

The militants have ramped up their push across much of Afghanistan, turning their guns on provincial capitals after taking large swaths of land in the mostly rural countryside. At the same time, they have been waging an assassination campaign targeting senior government officials in the capital of Kabul.

The sweep comes despite condemnations by the international community and warnings from the United Nations that a military victory and takeover by the Taliban would not be recognized. The Taliban have also not heeded appeals to return to the negotiating table and continue long-stalled peace talks with the Afghan government.

Government officials flee 

Two lawmakers from northern Samangan province — Hayatullah Samangani and Mahboba Rahmat — said the provincial capital of Aybak fell to the Taliban on Monday afternoon without resistance. They said government officials fled to another district. 

Internally displaced Afghans from northern provinces who fled their homes due to fighting between the Taliban and Afghan security personnel take refuge in a public park in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday. (Rahmat Gul/The Associated Press)

Provincial council member Mohammad Hashim Sarwari said Taliban fighters earlier had captured three districts of the province before overrunning the capital.

Another provincial lawmaker who is physically in Samangan, Ziauddin Zia, said some government installations were still under government control as security forces resisted Taliban fighters.

According to Mohammad Noor Rahmani, the council chief of northern Sar-e Pul province, the Taliban overran that provincial capital after more than a week of resistance by Afghan security forces, after which the city of Sar-e Pul collapsed. The government forces have now completely withdrawn from the province, he said.

Displaced Afghans from northern provinces gather in Kabul on Monday. Government forces are withdrawing from some provinces and pro-government local militia commanders are surrendering due to a relentless Taliban offensive as American and NATO forces get set to leave the country. (Rahmat Gul/The Associated Press)

Several pro-government local militia commanders also surrendered to the Taliban without a fight, allowing the insurgents to gain control of the entire province, Rahmani said.

The cities of Aybak and Sar-e Pul join three other provincial capitals now fully under Taliban control: Zaranj, the capital of western Nimroz province; the city of Shibirghan, the capital of northern Zawzjan province; and Taleqan, the capital of another northern province with the same name. 

Kunduz takeover key for Taliban 

The Taliban are also fighting for control of the city of Kunduz, the capital of northern Kunduz province.

On Sunday, they planted their flag in the city's main square, where it was seen flying atop a traffic police booth, a video obtained by The Associated Press showed. 

Kunduz's capture would be a significant gain for the Taliban and a test of their ability to take and retain territory in their campaign against the Western-backed government.

WATCH | Taliban fighters overrun parts of city of Kunduz: 
Taliban fighters have seized key government buildings in the strategic northeastern city of Kunduz. The Taliban offensive has gained momentum in recent days, as U.S. troops continue to withdraw from Afghanistan. 5:04

It is one of the country's larger cities with a population of more than 340,000, and was a key area defended against Taliban takeovers by Western troops over the years.

After billions of dollars spent in aiding, training and shoring up Afghan forces, many are at odds for how to explain the surprising Taliban blitz that has threatened — and by now taken — several of the country's 34 provincial capitals.

Rahmani, the council chief in Sar-e Pul, said the provincial capital had been under siege by the militants for weeks, with no reinforcements being sent to overstretched Afghan forces.

Taliban fighters stand guard in Kunduz city on Monday. The Taliban is fighting for control of the city, where it planted its flag in the main square on Sunday. (Abdullah Sahil/The Associated Press)

A video circulating on social media Monday shows a number of Taliban fighters standing in front of the Sar-e Pul governor's office and congratulating each other on the victory.

Dozens of children killed in past 3 days

The country-wide Taliban offensive intensified as U.S. and NATO troops began to wrap up their withdrawal from Afghanistan this summer.

With Taliban attacks increasing, Afghan security forces and government troops have retaliated with airstrikes aided by the United States. The fighting has also raised growing concerns about civilian casualties.

On Monday, UNICEF said it was shocked by the increasing number of casualties among children amid the escalating violence in Afghanistan.

Afghans inspect damaged shops after fighting between Taliban and Afghan security forces in Kunduz city on Sunday. (Abdullah Sahil/The Associated Press)

Over the past three days, at least 27 children have been killed in various provinces, including 20 in Kandahar, it said.

"These atrocities are also evidence of the brutal nature and scale of violence in Afghanistan which preys on already vulnerable children," the agency said.

It did not identify the side responsible for the killings. UNICEF also raised the alarm over what it said was increased recruitment of children by armed groups.

'Rotten deal'

The Taliban gains have sparked recriminations over the withdrawal of foreign forces. British Defence Secretary Ben Wallace told the Daily Mail that the accord struck last year between the United States and the Taliban was a "rotten deal."

Wallace said his government had asked some NATO allies to keep their troops in Afghanistan once the U.S. troops departed, but failed to garner enough support.

"Some said they were keen, but their parliaments weren't. It became apparent pretty quickly that without the United States as the framework nation it had been, these options were closed off," Wallace said.

Germany's defence minister rejected calls for its soldiers to return to Afghanistan after Taliban insurgents took Kunduz where German troops were deployed for a decade.

The Taliban have also taken most of Lashkar Gah, the capital of southern Helmand province, where they took nine of the 10 police districts in the city last week. Heavy fighting there continues, as do U.S. and Afghan government airstrikes, one of which damaged a health clinic and a high school.

Helmand Health Department Chief Sher Ali Shakir said Monday that in the previous 24 hours, seven people were killed and 95 were wounded in fighting and were transferred to hospitals in the province. 

An Afghan militiaman stands on a vehicle keeping a vigil along a road on the outskirts of Herat in a photo taken on Aug. 6, 2021. (AFP/Getty Images)

On Saturday, Taliban fighters entered the capital of the northern Jawzjan province after sweeping through nine of 10 districts in the province. The city of Kandahar, the provincial capital of Kandahar, also remains under siege.

As they rolled through provincial capitals, the Taliban issued an English-language statement on Sunday saying that residents, government employees and security officials had nothing to fear from them.

However, revenge attacks and repressive treatment of women have been reported in areas now under Taliban control.

WATCH | Pakistan hurries to finish border fence with Afghanistan: 
Pakistan says 90 per cent of its 2,670-kilometre border barrier with Afghanistan is complete and it's rushing to finish the rest. It says the barrier will help stop attacks by militants. (Anjum Naveed/AP Photo) 0:39

'We had to escape'

Meanwhile, hundreds of people displaced by fighting in northern provinces have reached Kabul, where they are living in parks without adequate access to drinking water amid scorching summer temperatures.

"We walked with slippers, didn't have the chance to wear our shoes," said Bibi Ruqia, who left northern Takhar province after a bomb hit her house. "We had to escape, now we are here in a park."

In Kabul on Sunday, unknown gunmen shot dead a journalist and a colleague, said police spokesperson Ferdaws Faramarz. He said Toofan Omar was also a prosecutor in Paktia province. Omar was traveling from Bagram to Kabul when his car was ambushed.

"It's not clear whether it was the result of a personal dispute or he was killed for being a prosecutor or journalist," Faramarz said.

The Taliban in response to a query from The Associated Press said they were investigating the incident.

The Taliban often target government officials and those they perceive as working for the government or foreign forces, though several attacks have been claimed by the Islamic State group. 

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Taliban takes 2 more provincial capitals in relentless Afghanistan offensive - CBC.ca
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