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Wednesday April 24, 2024

Taliban capture northern base as Afghan forces fight in Ghazni

By AFP
August 15, 2018

MAZAR-I-SHARIF, Afghanistan: Taliban fighters overran an army base in northern Afghanistan, officials said Tuesday, killing at least 17 soldiers with dozens feared captured in a stinging blow to security forces already struggling to push insurgents from eastern Ghazni.

The fall of the base in Ghormach district of volatile Faryab province came with security forces — who have struggled to hold back the Taliban since NATO combat troops pulled out in 2014 — already stretched by the days of fighting in Ghazni, a strategic provincial capital two hours from Kabul. Militants gained control of the base after days of heavy fighting, according to army spokesman for northern Afghanistan Mohammad Hanif Rezaee. He said around 100 soldiers were on the base when it was first attacked Sunday. “It is a tragedy that the base fell to the enemy. Some soldiers were killed, some captured and some fled to nearby hills,” Rezaee told AFP. At least 17 were killed in the attack, according to defence ministry spokesman Ghafoor Ahmad Jawed, while a local MP said Taliban fighters captured another 40 in the base, known as Chenaya.

“Preparations are underway to launch an operation to recapture the base,” said the ministry’s spokesman. Tahir Rehmani — head of Faryab’s provincial council — said the base fell after the soldiers begged for reinforcements and air support from Kabul but were ultimately ignored. “They were too busy with Ghazni,” said Rehmani. Ghazni, further east and which the Taliban first assaulted late Thursday, remains in government hands, officials have said.

But fears of civilian casualties in the city were growing as Afghan security forces backed by US air power struggled to push the Taliban out five days after the assault began. A spokesman for US Forces in Afghanistan, Lt. Col. Martin O’Donnell, said there had been “no reported enemy activity” so far Tuesday, though he added that “some Taliban forces remain in the city”. With reports of fighters hiding among the civilian population, O’Donnell said residents had been “terrorized and harassed”. “The Taliban, who falsely and repeatedly claim that they do not target civilians, have executed innocents, destroyed homes, burned a market and created the conditions for a potential humanitarian crisis with this attack,” he said. The United Nations said unverified reports put civilian casualties at more than 100, with residents also at risk from several days of US air strikes. O’Donnell said no air strikes had been carried out yet Tuesday.