Heavy fighting as Taliban breach southern Afghan city

Afghan security personnel walk at the site of a car bomb blast that targeted the CARE International compound at Shar-e-Naw in Kabul on September 6, 2016. Explosions rang out during an hours-long attack on an international charity in Kabul, the latest assault in a wave of violence in the Afghan capital that has killed at least 24 people and wounded dozens. / AFP PHOTO / WAKIL KOHSAR

 

Kandahar /AFP

The Taliban stormed into Tarin Kot on Thursday, triggering heavy fighting around government buildings as panicked residents scrambled to flee the capital of southern Uruzgan province, the latest city to be targeted by
insurgents.
Pitched battles prompted urgent calls from officials for reinforcements and air support, after the militants toppled security posts on the outskirts to breach the city gates.
Residents said senior officials were abandoning government buildings and fleeing to the airport on the outer edges of the city, which has practically been besieged by the Taliban for months. “If reinforcements do not arrive the city will collapse into the hands of the Taliban,” Karim Khademzai, head of the provincial capital, said. The fighting comes as the Taliban are threatening to capture Lashkar Gah in neighbouring Helmand province, and northern Kunduz, which the insurgents briefly seized last year in a stinging blow to Afghan forces.
“The Taliban have entered the city and are fighting to take over police and NDS (intelligence agency) headquarters, and we fear they will storm the prison to free captured insurgents,” Haji Bari Daad, a tribal elder in Tarin Kot, told AFP.
Sabir Menawal, a city resident, said Taliban fighters entered his house near the police headquarters and took up positions inside to fire at government buildings.
“The Taliban instructed us to leave the area immediately,” Menawal told AFP. “I fled with my family to a safer area of Tarin Kot, but we fear fighting could spread to this area too.”
Tarin Kot’s normally bustling streets were empty and shops closed as local residents sought to flee the city.
Deteriorating security
President Ashraf Ghani’s office, meanwhile, said the government will not allow “Uruzgan to become a sanctuary for terrorists”.
“Reinforcements have reached the province, and the local police chief and provincial officials are on the frontline fighting the enemy,” presidential spokesman Shahhussain Murtazawi said on Facebook.
That claim was refuted by multiple Tarin Kot residents, who said senior officials had been seen fleeing to the airport. “Many provincial officials including the governor and other heads of government departments are at the airport,” Khademzai said.
General Abdul Raziq, the powerful police chief of Kandahar, said he was personally leading a contingent of military reinforcements to Uruzgan.
“We are on our way to Tarin Kot with hundreds of forces to repel the enemy attack,” Raziq told AFP.
Seen previously as a rural militant movement capable only of hit-and-run attacks on cities, the Taliban have demonstrated an alarming new push into urban centres in recent months.

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