San Francisco Chronicle

President visits key city after battles with Taliban

- By Amir Shah Amir Shah is an Associated Press writer.

KABUL — The Afghan president visited the embattled southeaste­rn city of Ghazni on Friday, a week after the Taliban in a surprise attack managed to infiltrate deep into the key provincial capital and capture several areas of it.

Two rockets hit inside the city as President Ashraf Ghani held a meeting with elders at a nearby mosque, witnesses said. A third rocket landed in a nearby river, they said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

There were no injuries and Ghani was never in any danger. No one claimed responsibi­lity for firing the rockets.

The Taliban hung on in Ghazni for nearly five days before U.S.-backed Afghan forces flushed them out in what were some of the fiercest battles with the insurgents in recent months that killed scores of Afghan troops and civilians.

Security was on high alert as Ghani arrived by helicopter in Ghazni, the capital of Ghazni province, just 75 miles from the capital, Kabul.

They immediatel­y went into meetings with security officials and elders. In a speech, Khan said greater security was needed around district capitals, as well as the provincial capital, and questioned the strength of defense trenches dug around vulnerable areas.

In Kabul, the U.N. office for humanitari­an assistance said fighting was continuing on Ghazni’s outskirts. According to a report by OCHA, released late Thursday, water and electricit­y have yet to be restored in many areas of the city of 270,000 people.

The five-day battles with the Taliban in Ghazni, killed at least 100 members of Afghan security forces and 35 civilians before calm was restored on Tuesday. The OCHA report quotes “unverifiab­le numbers” that put the civilian death toll at more than 200.

Abdul Halim Noori, the head of the Afghan Red Crescent in Ghazni, said six of their teams are still sifting through the rubble in the city, searching for bodies. So far, the aid group has retrieved 270 bodies but there was no breakdown or indication how many were Afghan security troops, Taliban fighters or civilians.

In one home, they found bodies of 11 members of a single family, Noori said.

Even though they were pushed back from the city, the Taliban still hold sway in much of Ghazni province.

During the fighting, the Taliban destroyed the main telecommun­ication tower, just outside of Ghazni, and torched the television and radio station in the city. According to the OCHA report, mobile phone connection was gradually returning but outages remain frequent.

In his most detailed comments on the Taliban’s assault on Ghazni, Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis said Friday the Taliban had six objectives in and around the city and failed to seize any of them. He would not specify the six sites.

Mattis has said he believes the Afghan security forces are gaining momentum and can wear down the Taliban to the point where the insurgents would choose to talk peace. So far that approach has not produced a breakthrou­gh.

 ?? Rahmatulla­h Nikzad / Associated Press ?? Residents stand near a damaged house in Ghazni after battles between Taliban and Afghan soldiers.
Rahmatulla­h Nikzad / Associated Press Residents stand near a damaged house in Ghazni after battles between Taliban and Afghan soldiers.

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