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Coalition Forces retake Taliban town
KABUL (Afghanistan)—Afghan and international forces have retaken a
southern town held by Taliban militants since February, the Defense
Ministry said Monday. A Taliban spokesman said the militants fled to
avoid civilian and Taliban casualties.
Ministry spokesman Gen. Mohammad Zahir Azimi said Afghan, British and
U.S. forces had “completely captured” Musa Qala, a town in the opium
poppy growing belt of northern Helmand province. He said fighting was
continuing around the town.
Afghan and international troops have stepped up operations around Musa
Qala since early November, and fighting in the area has intensified in
the last several days as forces advanced on the town. A Taliban
spokesman, Qari Yousef Ahmadi, said militant fighters left Musa Qala as
a strategic decision to avoid Taliban and civilian casualties.
“Because of the massive bombings this morning, the Taliban didn’t want
to cause more casualties, so this afternoon all the Taliban left Musa
Qala,” Ahmadi told The Associated Press by satellite phone.
A resident of Musa Qala, Haji Mohammad Rauf, said he saw Taliban
fighters leave the town in trucks and motorbikes around noon. Two hours
later hundreds of Afghan soldiers streamed into town and establish
security checkpoints, he said. “I was standing on my roof and saw
hundreds of Afghan soldiers drive into town,” Rauf said. “All the shops
are closed and families are staying inside their homes.”
A British military spokesman, Lt. Col. Richard Eaton, said he couldn’t
confirm that the Taliban had left the town’s center but said he wouldn’t
be surprised. “This is what happens. We have had a number of operations
in the past where once the Taliban realize they are overmatched they
tend to leave,” Eaton said. “I wouldn’t be surprised if that is the case
here. Ultimately our aim is to take Musa Qala and if we take Musa Qala
without a big fight, that’s fantastic.”
Taliban militants overran Musa Qala in February, four months after
British troops left the town following a contentious peace agreement
that gave security responsibilities to Afghan elders. U.S.-led coalition
troops carried out airstrikes Sunday against compounds used by Taliban
weapons smugglers in Musa Qala, the coalition said Monday. Several
militants were killed and two civilians were wounded, it said.
Following the airstrike, the joint Afghan and coalition forces came
under attack as they searched compounds in the area. “Using a
combination of accurate, conventional munitions and small arms, the
combined force returned fire, killing the militants,” it said. Ten
suspects were detained.
Musa Qala is in the north of Helmand province, the world’s largest opium
poppy growing region — and the front line of Afghanistan’s bloodiest
fighting this year. Elsewhere, an Afghan army helicopter crashed in
central Afghanistan on Monday because of bad weather, killing four
people, the Defense Ministry said. The Mi-17 helicopter went down in
Salar district of Wardak province, where the weather was foggy.
Two helicopters were traveling from Kabul toward western Afghanistan
when one of them crashed, said Wardak provincial police chief Zafaruddin,
who goes by only one name. Authorities recovered three bodies from the
burning wreckage, he said. In neighboring Sangin district, Afghan police
clashed Monday with a group of Taliban militants, leaving 15 militants
dead and 11 others wounded, said district police chief Mohammad
Ali.Authorities recovered some of the dead militants’ bodies, Ali said.
There were no casualties among Afghan troops, he said. This year has
been the deadliest since the U.S.-led invasion in 2001.
More than 6,200 people have been killed in insurgency-related violence,
according to an AP tally of figures from Western and Afghan
officials.—Agencies
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