Heavy fighting is continuing in the Afghan city of Kunduz, one day after government forces launched a counter-attack to reclaim it from the Taliban.
Two US air strikes on Tuesday halted an attempt by insurgents to seize the airport, the army’s stronghold.
Afghanistan’s spy agency says the strikes killed the Taliban leader in the province and his deputy, but the Taliban has denied this.
The capture of Kunduz represents the militants’ biggest victory since 2001.
On Tuesday the United States acknowledged the seizure of Kunduz as a setback, but says it remains confident that Afghan security forces can re-take the northern city.
Overnight there were clashes around the city, but it remains unclear just how much of it remains under government or Taliban control.
Sayed Sarwar Hussaini, a spokesman for Kunduz’s police chief, told Reuters: “Hundreds of Taliban are killed and their dead bodies are on (the) streets.”
The Afghan defence ministry claimed the town’s police headquarters and prison had been recaptured, after militants released hundreds of prisoners when they took the city on Monday.
But Taliban-released video showed militants in the town showing off seized tanks, armoured vehicles, police cars and Red Cross vans.
An eyewitness told the BBC that Taliban reinforcements had also arrived, with the situation too dangerous for locals to leave.
Residents, nervous of both the Taliban and the possibility of street-fighting in the battle for the city, are largely staying indoors.
The Taliban’s new leader, Mullah Akhtar Mansour, said the government should admit defeat.
President Ashraf Ghani, who completed his first year in office on Tuesday, said in a televised address that “progress” was being made recapturing Kunduz, but security forces had been hampered by the Taliban using civilians as human shields.
BBC
NAWA
September 30, 2015 at 5:42 pm
This is the manifestation of the US poor handling of conflicts in other sovereign states. their rule and divide mantra type of Democracy always breeds wars and violence wherever they’ve set their foot prints. pliz find an amicable solution to this in which there should be an all-inclusive Govt from all the warring parties. Your foreign Policies are good but you can still do better.
Big Nose
September 30, 2015 at 8:47 pm
sheeeeeeee danger