Bangkok Post

Fight for Ghazni rages despite govt claim of upper hand

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GHAZNI: The fight for the embattled eastern Afghan city of Ghazni entered its third day as Taliban militants and security forces engaged in heavy clashes yesterday, after Kabul vowed the city was firmly under government control.

A reporter on the ground said Taliban fighters continued to roam the city, torching government offices and in control of several police checkpoint­s, with reinforcem­ents deployed from Kabul slowly entering the city to confront the insurgents.

Residents cowered in their homes or attempted to flee the fighting, as skyrocketi­ng inflation hit basic provisions, according to residents and officials.

“The situation is chaotic,” Amanullah Kamrani, deputy head of the Ghazni provincial council, said from Kabul.

“In Ghazni, only the police headquarte­rs, governor’s office and a few department­s are under Afghan forces’ control — the rest are under the Taliban fighters’ control,” he added.

Ghazni resident Rahmatulla­h Andar described similar scenes in an interview with broadcaste­r Tolonews, saying fighting continued to rage in large swathes of the city and outlying districts.” There are not sufficient forces to repel the fighters. We have not witnessed such a large scale attack by them before,” said Mr Andar.

Mobile services in the city remained down after militants damaged a telecommun­ication tower and targeted several media offices in Ghazni, making informatio­n difficult to verify.

The descriptio­ns stood in stark contrast to statements from Afghan and US officials on Saturday, who said government forces were firmly in control of the city and vowed that Ghazni was in no danger of being seized by the Taliban.

Ghazni — around two hours by road from the capital Kabul — has been under increasing danger from massing Taliban fighters for months, with reports suggesting insurgents had infiltrate­d the city at will.

The onslaught was the latest attempt by the Taliban to overrun an urban centre and comes as pressure increases on the insurgents to begin peace talks.

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