DM Monitoring
Kandahar: More than 22,000 Afghan families have fled from their homes to escape fighting in the former Taliban bastion of Kandahar, officials said on Sunday, as authorities arrested four suspected insurgents over this week’s rocket attack on Kabul.
Since early May, violence has surged across several provinces including in Kandahar after the insurgents launched a sweeping offensive just days after the US-led foreign forces began their final withdrawal. The Taliban’s deadly assault has seen the insurgents capture scores of districts, border crossings and encircle several provincial capitals. “The fighting has displaced 22,000 families in the past one month in Kandahar,” Dost Mohammad Daryab, head of the provincial refugee department, told media.
“They have all moved from the volatile districts of the city to safer areas.” Fighting continued on the outskirts of Kandahar city on Sunday. “The negligence of some security forces, especially the police, has made way for the Taliban to come that close,” Lalai Dastageeri, deputy governor of Kandahar province, told media. “We are now trying to organise our security forces.”
Local authorities had set up 4 camps for the displaced people who were estimated to be about 154,000. Hafiz M. Akbar of Kandahar said his house had been taken over by the Taliban after he fled.