The Star Late Edition

Scores killed in Afghan fighting over Ghazni

Massive show of force by Taliban as it launches offensive

- KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N

FOUR days of ferocious fighting between Afghan forces and the Taliban over a key provincial capital has claimed the lives of about 100 Afghan policemen and soldiers and at least 20 civilians, the defence minister said yesterday.

The staggering numbers provided by General Tareq Shah Bahrami were the first official casualty toll since the Taliban launched a massive assault on Ghazni, the capital of Ghazni province, last Friday.

The multi-pronged assault overwhelme­d the city’s defences and allowed insurgents to capture several parts of it. It was a major show of force by the Taliban, who infiltrate­d deep into this strategic city barely 120km from the capital, Kabul.

The US has sent military advisers to aid Afghan forces.

The fall of Ghazni, a city of 270 000 people, would mark an important victory for the Taliban. It would also cut off a key highway linking Kabul to the southern provinces, the Taliban’s traditiona­l heartland.

Bahrami, the defence minister, spoke to reporters at a press conference in Kabul yesterday. He said the casualty figures are not yet definite and that the numbers might change. He didn’t offer a breakdown of the casualties but Interior Minister Wais Ahmad Barmak said nearly 70 policemen were among those killed.

Bahrami said about 1 000 additional troops have been sent to Ghazni and helped prevent the city from falling into Taliban hands. He also said 194 insurgents, including 12 leaders, were killed – with Pakistani, Chechen and Arabs foreign fighters among the dead.

The Taliban has inflicted huge damages on the city, especially Ghazni’s historic parts and cultural heritage, Bahrami said, adding that he believes the next 24 hours would turn the tide in the battle.

Barmak, the interior minister, said top security and government officials, as well as the military chief of staff were now in Ghazni, leading the “clearing up operations” in different parts of the city.

The attack began on Friday, with insurgents infiltrati­ng people’s homes and slipping out into the night to attack Afghan forces in Ghazni.

The Taliban also destroyed a telecommun­ications tower on Ghazni’s outskirts, cutting off all landline and cellphone links to the city.

Afghan authoritie­s have insisted that the city would not fall to the Taliban and that Afghan forces remained in control of key government positions and other institutio­ns there.

Colonel Fared Mashal, the province’s police chief, said the majority of the insurgents fighting in Ghazni are foreigners, including Pakistanis and Chechens. “The Taliban has failed in reaching its goal,” Mashal added.

Meanwhile, hundreds of civilians have fled from the city.

One of them, 60-year-old Ghulam Mustafa, made it to neighbouri­ng Maidan Wardak province with 14 of his family members.

“The city became so dangerous,” he said. “Ghazni has become a ghost city.”

Mustafa’s wife Razia said they had no food, water or electricit­y for the past four days. “There were so many dead bodies under the bridges, at the side of roads and under the destroyed houses,” she said.

A 14-year-old girl, Fereshta, who only goes by one name, said that when the Taliban entered Ghazni, it was the first time in her life that she saw the insurgents.

Over the past months, the Taliban has seized several districts across Afghanista­n, staging near-daily attacks on Afghan security forces, but has been unable to capture and hold urban areas.

The US and Nato formally concluded their combat mission in Afghanista­n at the end of 2014, but have since then repeatedly come to the aid of Afghan forces as they struggle to combat the resurgent Taliban.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani is said to be considerin­g a ceasefire offer to the Taliban for the upcoming Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, which starts on August 21. A three-day holiday ceasefire in June brought rare quiet to much of the country, but the insurgents rejected a government request to extend it.

Instead, the Taliban appears intent on seeking a position of strength ahead of expected talks with the US, which has been at war in Afghanista­n for nearly 17 years.

The Taliban says it has met Alice Wells, the top US diplomat for South Asia, in Qatar last month for preliminar­y talks. Washington neither confirmed nor denied the meeting, but acknowledg­ed Wells was in Qatar, where the Taliban maintains an office. The Taliban said it expected another round of talks.

As part of an effort to bolster Afghan fighting strength, the US earlier this year sent more military advisers to Afghanista­n. It also shifted A-10 attack planes and other aircraft from striking Islamic State militants in Syria and Iraq to Afghanista­n. These have boosted the number of US troops in Afghanista­n by at least 3 500 to more than 14 000.

 ?? PICTURE:AP ?? An Afghan security guard in Ghazni city.
PICTURE:AP An Afghan security guard in Ghazni city.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa