Times of Suriname

Afghan government under pressure as Taliban threaten new district

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AFGHANISTA­N - Taliban fighters closed in on another district in Afghanista­n yesterday as officials sought to reassure an increasing­ly angry public that security would improve.

Yesterday, the insurgents were besieging the governor’s compound in Ajrestan district in Ghazni, south of the capital Kabul, although officials said reinforcem­ents had arrived and were relieving police defending the town.

The fighting in Ghazni, which has long had a heavy Taliban presence, follows several days of fighting in Farah province, on the other side of Afghanista­n on the border with Iran where the insurgents came close to overrunnin­g the provincial capital.

General John Nicholson, the top U.S. commander in Afghanista­n visited Farah on Saturday with the ministers of the interior and defense and the head of the NDS intelligen­ce service. “Farah did not fall and Farah will never fall,” he said, calling on the Taliban to accept President Ashraf Ghani’s offer of peace talks. “We will stay with you until we bring this war to a peaceful conclusion,” he said. He met local officials in the governor’s compound and heard a bitter litany of complaints about the failure of the government to protect the city and the province, where the Taliban control many areas.

“If you want to make Farah better, then please, you should help before there’s an incident,” said Belqis Roshan, a former senator. “We have 10 districts, and apart from the centers, they’re under Taliban rule,” she said.

Reinforcem­ents rushed in from other provinces and repeated strikes by Afghan and U.S. air forces pushed the insurgents back from the city center but bazaars remain deserted and the streets empty.

“People are still worried about the situation,” said Farah resident Abdullah. “The Taliban have a strong presence in almost all districts and are still hiding in some parts of the city.” As the Taliban have continued the spring offensive they launched last month, heavy fighting has been seen from Badakhshan and Baghlan provinces in the north to Farah in the west and Ghazni and Zabul in the center.

(Reuters)

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