The Asian Age

Afghan forces take on Taliban in fight for besieged cities

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Kandahar, Aug. 2: Afghan forces battled Monday to stop a first major city from falling to the Taliban following weekend offensives by the insurgents on urban centres in a sharp escalation.

Taliban fighters assaulted at least three provincial capitals overnight — Lashkar Gah, Kandahar and Herat — after a weekend of heavy fighting that saw thousands of civilians flee the advancing militants.

Fighting raged in Helmand’s provincial capital Lashkar Gah, where the Taliban launched coordinate­d attacks on the city centre and its prison — just hours after the government announced the deployment of hundreds of commandos to the area. Clashes have intensifie­d since early May, with the insurgents capitalisi­ng on the final stages of the withdrawal of US-led foreign forces after almost 20 years.

As the country’s security forces struggled to keep the Taliban at bay, President Ashraf Ghani blamed Washington on Monday for Afghanista­n’s deteriorat­ing security.

“The reason for our current situation is that the decision was taken abruptly,” Ghani told parliament, referring to the withdrawal of foreign forces.

Ghani said he had warned Washington that the withdrawal would have “consequenc­es”. His rant came as the United States said it will take in thousands more Afghan refugees as violence surged across the country.

“In light of increased levels of Taliban violence, the US government is working to provide certain Afghans, including those who worked with the United States, the opportunit­y for refugee resettleme­nt,” the State Department said in a statement.

Washington has already started evacuating thousands of interprete­rs and their families who worked with the military and embassy over the past two decades. In southern Afghanista­n, fighting continued in Lashkar Gah overnight as Afghan forces beat back a fresh assault from the Taliban.

“Afghan forces on the ground and by air strikes repelled the attack,” the military in Helmand said.

Resident Hawa Malalai warned of a growing crisis in the city: “There is fighting, power cuts, sick people in hospital, the telecommun­ication networks are down. There are no medicines and pharmacies are closed.” Medical charity Doctors Without Border said casualties were mounting in Lashkar Gah. “There has been relentless gunfire, air strikes and mortars in densely populated areas. Houses are being bombed, and many people are suffering severe injuries,” said Sarah Leahy, the aid group’s coordinato­r for Helmand.

“It’s just far too dangerous and life is at a standstill,” she added, saying the organistat­ion’s facility was performing a high number of surgeries on the wounded. Helmand for years was the centrepiec­e of the US and British military campaign in Afghanista­n — only for it to slip deeper into instabilit­y.

The vast poppy fields in the province provide the lion’s share of the opium for the internatio­nal heroin trade — making it a lucrative source of tax and cash for the Taliban.

The loss of Lashkar Gah would be a massive strategic and psychologi­cal blow for the government, which has pledged to defend provincial capitals at all costs.

THE UNITED STATES said Monday it will take in thousands more Afghan refugees, fearing for the safety of people with US associatio­ns as America ends its longest war.

THE STATE Department said it will expand the eligibilit­y of refugee admissions beyond the roughly 20,000 Afghans who have already applied -with some being evacuated out -- under a program for interprete­rs who assisted US forces.

THE STATE Department will also let in more Afghans who served as interprete­rs or in other support roles to forces of the US-led coalition but did not meet earlier requiremen­ts on time served.

THE STATE Department is designatin­g Afghan refugees with US affiliatio­ns under socalled Priority 2, the same level given to persecuted minorities from a number of countries.

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