Kuwait Times

100 Afghan forces killed

-

KABUL: At least 100 Afghan security forces have been killed as troops backed by US airpower struggled to push the Taleban from embattled Ghazni city, officials said yesterday, while residents reported food and medicine shortages four days after fighting began. The Afghan government said it had sent reinforcem­ents to the strategic city, which lies barely two hours drive from Kabul on the main highway connecting the capital with the country’s south. US forces in Afghanista­n said they had been conducting airstrikes daily since the fighting began. The assault, which the Taleban launched late Thursday, comes as the insurgents are under increasing pressure to join peace talks and highlights the difficulty of repelling their repeated attacks on urban centers crowded with civilians, with residents among the dead.

“About 100 security forces have lost their lives and between 20 and 30 civilians have been killed,” defense minister Tariq Shah Bahrami told a press conference in Kabul, offering the first high-level official casualty figure since the insurgents entered the city. He also said that 194 insurgents had been killed and 147 wounded. The Taleban swiftly responded, saying the government’s claims were “baseless” and that talks were “under way for their surrender”. Doctors were struggling to treat dozens of wounded at hospitals in the eastern provincial capital, where residents said insurgents roamed the streets. At a hospital in the city wounded people could be seen groaning in agony on stretchers, while uncovered wooden coffins filled with bodies were laid on the floor. A doctor in the hospital’s intensive care unit said they had received over 80 dead bodies as of Sunday and had treated more than 160 patients, many of whom were had been injured by gunshots or shrapnel. “There are no police or soldiers to guard the hospital. They bring their wounded and then leave,” the doctor, Mohammad Arif Omari, said. “The hospital is overwhelme­d,” Andrea Catta Preta, a spokeswoma­n for the Internatio­nal Red Cross in Kabul, told AFP.

With residents reporting power remained out in the city, she said the Red Cross was able to reach the hospital yesterday during a brief lull in fighting, providing nearly 200 litres of fuel for its generator and medical supplies for over 100 people. “Everybody is requesting assistance, so we have been doing what we can whenever we have a window of security to do something,” she added. An AFP reporter in the city said late Sunday that militants were going door to door and commandeer­ing supplies including water, tea, and wheelbarro­ws to move injured fighters.

Ghazni residents who arrived in Kabul after fleeing the violence said that the dead bodies of militants and soldiers continued to litter the streets, while government offices have been set ablaze by Taleban fighters and food prices are rising. “Everyone wanted to find a way to flee the city. Most of the people are still hiding in their basements as fighting is going from street to street,” said Ghazni journalist Fayeza Fayez, who arrived in Kabul late Sunday after fleeing the city. Communicat­ion networks in Ghazni remained mostly down, and officials have been reticent, making any informatio­n difficult to verify and fuelling rumors of high tolls. —AFP

 ?? —AFP ?? GHAZNI: Coffins with corpses are seen on the floor of a mosque inside a hospital following clashes with Taleban fighters in Ghazni province.
—AFP GHAZNI: Coffins with corpses are seen on the floor of a mosque inside a hospital following clashes with Taleban fighters in Ghazni province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait