The Sun (Malaysia)

Taliban, Afghan forces declare holiday ceasefire

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The Taliban and Afghan government yesterday declared a three-day ceasefire for this week’s Eid al-Fitr holiday, following a sharp spike in violence as Washington goes about withdrawin­g its remaining troops from Afghanista­n.

Violence has soared since May 1 – the deadline missed by the United States to withdraw the last of its troops – and while the Taliban have avoided engaging American forces, attacks against government and civilian targets have not stopped.

In the latest, the Interior Ministry said yesterday that at least 11 people were killed by a bomb that struck a bus overnight in southeaste­rn Zabul province.

That followed Saturday’s carnage outside a school in Kabul when a series of bombs killed at least 50 people and wounded more than 100 – most of them young girls.

Early yesterday, the Taliban instructed their fighters “to halt all offensive operations against the enemy countrywid­e from the first till the third day of Eid”.

That was matched later in the day by Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, who went further by urging the Taliban to announce a permanent truce to end the bloody war.

On Saturday, a series of bombs detonated outside a girls’ school in Dasht-e-Barchi, a suburb of Kabul.

It was the deadliest attack in more than a year and came as residents were shopping ahead of the Eid holiday.

On Sunday, on a desolate hilltop cemetery, bodies in small coffins were lowered into graves, one by one, by mourners still in shock.

“I rushed to the scene and found myself in the middle of bodies, their hands and heads cut off and bones smashed,” said Mohammad Taqi, whose two daughters were students at the school but escaped the attack.

“All of them were girls. Their bodies piled on top of each other,” he said.

“The Taliban were saying they were fighting the foreigners, but now the foreigners are leaving,” Kabul resident Rashed Hashimi said.

“So, why are they fighting Afghans?”

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