Bangkok Post

Afghan troops flee Taliban

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DUSHANBE: More than 1,000 Afghan troops fled into neighbouri­ng Tajikistan in the early hours of yesterday after clashes with the Taliban, the Central Asian country’s national security committee said.

Taliban militants have launched several major offensives in northern Afghanista­n in recent weeks as US and internatio­nal troops withdraw from the country, including seizing its main crossing into Tajikistan last month.

Yesterday, Tajikistan’s national security committee said that 1,037 Afghan government troops had fled into the exSoviet country “in order to save their lives” after clashes with the Taliban during the night.

“Taking into account the principle of good neighbourl­iness and adhering to the position of non-interferen­ce in the internal affairs of Afghanista­n, the military personnel of the Afghan government forces were allowed to enter Tajik territory,” the committee said in a statement distribute­d by Tajikistan’s state informatio­n agency Khovar.

It said the Taliban had taken “full control” of six districts of the Badakhshan province bordering Tajikistan in Afghanista­n’s northeast.

Several hundred Afghan troops had already crossed into Tajikistan after the Taliban unleashed its onslaught in early May.

The militants have seized dozens of Afghanista­n’s districts, raising fears that that the Afghan military will collapse once US and internatio­nal troops complete their withdrawal from the country in September.

US President Joe Biden has ordered the departure of all United States forces from Afghanista­n by this year’s 20th anniversar­y of the Sept 11 attacks that triggered the invasion.

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