Kuwait Times

Searching for loved ones in the ashes of Ghazni, Afghanista­n

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GHAZNI: Residents searched coffins for loved ones and scuffed through the ashes of burned buildings as the scale of the devastatio­n in Afghanista­n’s Ghazni became clear yesterday, six days after a Taleban assault cut off most communicat­ion. Fighting appeared to have ceased in the provincial capital, just two hours drive from Kabul, nearly a week after the Taleban first launched their assault late Thursday, in the process destroying telecommun­ications towers and slowing the flow of informatio­n from the city to a trickle.

Many residents have already fled the city, adding to the influx of people displaced by violence that has long strained resources in Kabul. Those left behind have spent days hiding in basements, struggling to keep children and each other calm as the sound of intense ground fighting and US airstrikes boomed overhead. With food and water growing short, they were warily coming out on to the streets to find loved ones lost and livelihood­s destroyed.

Outside of Ghazni’s central hospital women and soldiers cautiously inspected the bodies filling wooden caskets scattered near the entrance. There, the corpses of what appeared to be Afghan security forces, Taleban fighters and civilians were left during the melee. Attendants wore gas masks while others covered their faces with scarves and shawls as they peeled back the sheets covering the corpses and examined the faces of the dead, searching for family members. “We request the government to move the dead bodies piled up in the provincial hospital. People are suffering from the smell of the bodies,” said one resident. With mobile service partially restored to pockets of Ghazni yesterday for the first time in days, others were franticall­y calling loved ones, praying for answers. “Since the morning, I have received about a hundred calls from friends, relatives and colleagues asking if I was alive,” said resident Abdul. “Today for the first time someone from the hospital called me to say that my cousin was wounded,” said another, Zargham, as he ran toward the medical facility after days of agonising over her fate.

‘Nothing left here’

Informatio­n coming from the city remains patchy and difficult to verify. The UN special representa­tive for Afghanista­n has said reports indicate that the civilian death toll from the fighting was “immense”, with unverified tolls suggesting more than 100 civilians were killed in the clashes. Officials said at least 100 Afghan security forces had also died in the battle, while US authoritie­s added that hundreds of Taleban fighters were killed. “We received around a hundred dead bodies — most of which were security forces and police but also there were some civilians among them,” said Abdul Basir Ramaki, the head of Ghazni provincial hospital.

The carnage unleashed also underscore­d the devastatin­g economic impact of the nearly 17-year-old conflict. During the fighting an entire market was razed by the onslaught. Shops and stalls in the sprawling bazaar were reduced to ash by raging fires that may ultimately destroy the livelihood­s of the owners. — AFP

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