Afghan forces retake town overrun by Taliban
AFGHANISTAN: Afghan security forces supported by NATO troops
recaptured a town in western Afghanistan on Tuesday that briefly fell to
Taliban militants, an official said.
About 200 Afghan police and soldiers moved into the remote town of
Bakwa in Farah province early Tuesday and faced no resistance, said Gov.
Muhajuddin Baluch. He said some NATO troops joined the operation.
The Afghan forces were searching the vicinity for the militants, who
moved into Bakwa on Monday and briefly held it and then left, taking
three seized vehicles with them, he said. It was the second time this
month that the government has lost control of a district in the region.
Meanwhile, a U.S. soldier was killed during combat operations on
Monday in the Naray area of eastern Kunar province, the U.S. military
said in a brief statement.
At least 297 American soldiers have died in and around Afghanistan
since U.S. forces invaded in late 2001 to topple the hardline Taliban
regime. The name of the latest fatality was being withheld pending
notification of next of kin, the statement said.
Also on Monday, U.S.-led coalition forces dropped a 2,000-pound
(910-kilogram) bomb on a cave where insurgents retreated after a clash
in southern Uruzgan province, U.S. military spokesman Lt. Col. David
Accetta said. He had no details on insurgent casualties.
The past year has seen a surge in violence in Afghanistan, and
militants are posing an increasing challenge to the weak power of
President Hamid Karzai’s government.
Baluch said authorities had not re-established contact with the
police commander who abandoned his post in Bakwa on Monday as the
Taliban moved in. Afghan army troops will stay with police in Bakwa for
10 to 15 days to consolidate their control, he said.
The police retreat followed Sunday’s bombing of a car carrying the
province’s police chief on his return from destroying opium poppy fields
- an eradication campaign opposed by many farmers. The police chief was
unharmed, but four other officers in the vehicle were killed and two
wounded.
Baryalaj Khan, spokesman for the Farah police chief, blamed Taliban
militants for the attack, saying they were involved in the drug trade,
but gave no evidence to support his claim.
Bakwa is about 65 kilometers (40 miles) from Helmand, the hub of
Afghanistan’s world-leading illicit opium and heroin industry. It was
the second town to fall from government hands this month.
Taliban militants overran Helmand’s town of Musa Qala on Feb. 1,
defying a peace deal between the government and elders last year that
capped weeks of fighting. The government is negotiating with elders to
get them to persuade the militants to leave.
Kabul, Tuesday, AP |