Taliban now terrorise 80% of Afghanistan after eight years of war: Report

Kabul, Sep. 11 (ANI): Almost eight years after the war began in Afghanistan in the aftermath of the 9/11 carnage, the Taliban insurgency has spread across 80 percent of the country.

The violent incidents this week have drawn attention to the deteriorating security situation of northern Afghanistan, which had largely remained peaceful so far, the Christian Science Monitor reports.

The northern provinces are facing difficult times as heavy insurgent activity has spread to 80 percent of the country – up from 54 percent two years ago, the report says.

The militants’ focus has shifted to northern parts following continuous pressure from their Pakistani counterparts to attack NATO’s second supply route situated here, it adds.

“[Militants] have been trying to widen the ground for the insurgency in Afghanistan and now they have got momentum. The militants are eager to target this route to prevent a smooth supply chain from northern Afghanistan,” the report quoted Waliullah Rahmani, executive director of the Kabul Center for Strategic Studies, as saying.

Last week’s airstrike targeted two fuel tankers headed to supply NATO troops in Kabul that had been hijacked by the Taliban.

Although the increase in violence is only a recent phenomenon, the conditions had worsened long ago, the report says.

The violence can be linked to districts with large Pashtun populations, whose grievances the government has failed to address – making them sympathetic to the Taliban, who share their ethnicity and language, it adds.

“The districts which are turning violent are those which have had a very recent history of abuses against the Pashtuns.

The government has allowed these conditions to go unaddressed and this is now being addressed by the population by giving shelter to the Taliban and other insurgents,”the report quoted Prakhar Sharma, the head of research at the Center for Conflict and Peace Studies, as saying.(ANI)

Taliban captures new areas in NWFP

Islamabad, Apr.11 (ANI): The Swat Taliban has established its grip over new areas in the Buner region of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

A day earlier, the Taliban had announced that it would move out of the region.

According to sources Taliban fighters have also taken control of the shrine of Sufi saint Pir Baba in the region.

“They (Taliban) have taken control of vast areas in Buner. They are freely moving around while police and other law-enforcement personnel remain confined to their posts,” the Dawn quoted a local living near the shrine, as saying.

Sources said that outlawed operatives ransacked the shrine and destroyed it completely.V sets, pictures, paintings and audio-video cassettes were put on fire in the shrine before being locked.

Security officials said they have been asked by their superiors not to retaliate.

“We have been asked by our seniors not to interfere with the Taliban,” a police officer of the Pir Baba police station said.

The official said Taliban fighters possessed some very advanced arms and ‘never seen before’ arms and ammunitions.

The Taliban has also captured houses of several tribal elders in the region.

The administration said that talks were on with the militants to urge them leave the area, but sources said the talks between the militants, administration officials and a local jirga headed by Maulana Waliullah Kalbalgrami, could not reach an agreement, and they have been allowed to ‘go anywhere’ in Buner. (ANI)