The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Official: Taliban capture district in Helmand

Insurgents now hold 60% of province, government says.

- By Mirwais Khan

KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTA­N — An important district in Afghanista­n’s southern poppy-growing province of Helmand has fallen under Taliban control after heavy fighting that killed around 17 police and wounded up to 10 others, an official said Saturday.

The director of Helmand’s provincial council, Kareem Atal, said Taliban militants attacked a series of police checkpoint­s Friday night as part of a larger assault in the Kanashin district.

Earlier, his deputy, Abdul Majeed Akhonzada, said Kanashin district had “fallen into Taliban hands.”

The fall of the district, which borders Pakistan and major poppy-producing districts, means “Taliban are in control of 60 percent of Helmand,” Akhonzada said.

Much of the area of Marjah, Sangin, Garmser and Dishu districts has already fallen to the Taliban, he said.

The district police chief and deputy head of the local branch of the national intelligen­ce agency were critically wounded in clashes, he said.

Precise casualty figures could not be confirmed as fighting was still underway, he added. He said bodies still littered the ground.

Atal said troops had been deployed to retake the district, but it would be a difficult task “because the Taliban have destroyed all the checkpoint­s.”

The central authoritie­s have been trying for many months to convince rural districts to reduce the number of police checkpoint­s, which are manned by small numbers of policemen who are vulnerable to Taliban attack. They want to consolidat­e the checkpoint­s, so that there are fewer of them and each one is more heavily manned and less vulnerable to attack.

Residents, however, prefer the regularly spaced small checkpoint­s, officials have said, as they make them feel safer.

Kanashin is a major drug smuggling route. Helmand produces most of the world’s opium, the raw material of heroin, which helps fund the Taliban’s insurgency.

The fall of Kanashin follows a report by the Special Inspector General for Afghanista­n Reconstruc­tion, which concluded that government forces had lost 5 percent of the territory they held at the end of January.

The report said 65.6 percent of districts across Afghanista­n were under government “control or influence” at the end of May, a decrease from 70.5 percent at the end of January.

It said that of Afghanista­n’s 407 districts, 268 were under government control of influence, 36 or 8.8 percent were under insurgent control or influence, and 104 or 25.6 percent were considered “at risk.”

The Taliban have been fighting to overthrow the Kabul government since 2001, when its regime was ousted by the U.S. invasion.

The insurgents consider Helmand, along with neighborin­g Kandahar province, to be their heartland.

Elsewhere on Saturday, explosives hidden in a fruit cart at a market in the western city of Herat killed two people and wounded six others, according to Abdul Rawoof Ahmadi, spokesman for the provincial police chief.

He said the bomb targeted Afghan security forces who were buying fruit and other supplies for their nearby base.

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