What's new

Multiple casualties feared as Taliban violently disperse rare protest in Jalalabad days after takeover

Kuru

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jul 8, 2017
Messages
2,880
Reaction score
-18
Country
India
Location
India
Published 18 Aug, 2021 06:30pm
Multiple casualties feared as Taliban violently disperse rare protest in Jalalabad days after takeover
AP | REUTERS
Welcome

The Taliban violently broke up a protest in eastern Afghanistan on Wednesday, quashing a rare public show of dissent even as they met with Afghan officials from the Western-backed government they toppled.
Dozens of people gathered in the city of Jalalabad to raise the national flag a day before Afghanistan’s Independence Day, which commemorates the end of British rule in 1919. They lowered the Taliban flag — a white banner with an Islamic inscription — that the group has raised in the areas it has captured.
Video footage later showed the Taliban firing into the air and attacking people with batons to disperse the crowd. Babrak Amirzada, a reporter for a local news agency, said he and a TV cameraman from another agency were beaten by the Taliban as they tried to cover the unrest.

According to an Afghan health official — speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to media — at least one person was killed and six were wounded when the Taliban violently dispersed the protest.
However, two witnesses told Reuters that at least three people were killed and more than a dozen injured when the Taliban opened fire.
A former police official told Reuters separately that four people had been killed and 13 injured in the protests, without elaborating further.
Video footage shot by Pajhwok Afghan News, a local news agency, showed protesters in the city who were carrying the Afghan flag fleeing with the sound of gunshots in the background.

“There were some troublemakers who wanted to create issues for us,” a Taliban member present in Jalalabad at the time of the incident told Reuters. “These people are exploiting our relaxed policies,” he said.
Taliban spokesmen could not immediately be reached for comment.
The group's every action in its sudden sweep to power is being watched closely. The Taliban insist they have changed and won’t impose the same draconian restrictions they did when they last ruled Afghanistan — all but eliminating women’s rights, carrying out public executions and harbouring Al Qaeda in the years before the 9/11 attacks.
But many Afghans remain deeply sceptical, and the violent response to Wednesday’s protest could only fuel their fears. Thousands are racing to the airport and borders to flee the country. Many others are hiding inside their homes, fearful after prisons and armouries were emptied during the group's blitz across the country.

Opposition figures gather
Meanwhile, videos from the Panjshir Valley north of Kabul, a stronghold of the Northern Alliance militias that allied with the US against the Taliban in 2001, appeared to show potential opposition figures gathering there. It’s in the only province that hasn’t yet fallen to the Taliban.

Those figures include members of the deposed government — Vice President Amrullah Saleh, who asserted on Twitter that he is the country’s rightful president and Defence Minister General Bismillah Mohammadi — as well as Ahmad Massoud, the son of the slain Northern Alliance leader Ahmad Shah Massoud. It’s unclear if they intend to challenge the Taliban, who seized most of the country in a matter of days last week.

Intra-Afghan negotiations
The Taliban, meanwhile, pressed ahead with their efforts to form an “inclusive, Islamic government”.

They have been holding talks with former President Hamid Karzai and Abdullah Abdullah, a senior official in the ousted government.

Mohammad Yusof Saha, a spokesman for Karzai, said preliminary meetings with Taliban officials would facilitate eventual negotiations with Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the top Taliban political leader, who returned to the country this week.

Karzai and Abdullah met on Wednesday with Anas Haqqani, a senior leader in a powerful Taliban faction. The US branded the Haqqani network a terrorist group in 2012, and its involvement in a future government could trigger international sanctions.

Amid the uncertainty, thousands of Afghans have tried to flee the country in recent days, and the US and its allies have struggled to manage a chaotic withdrawal from the country.

Citizens trying to flee
Hundreds of people were outside the airport early on Wednesday. The Taliban demanded to see documents before allowing the rare passenger inside. Many of the people outside did not appear to have passports, and each time the gate opened even an inch, dozens tried to push through. The Taliban fired occasional warning shots to disperse them.

In Kabul, groups of Taliban fighters carrying long guns patrolled a well-to-do neighbourhood that is home to many embassies as well as mansions of the Afghan elite.

The Taliban have promised to maintain security, but residents say groups of armed men have been going door to door inquiring about Afghans who worked with the Americans or the deposed government. It’s unclear if the gunmen are Taliban or criminals posing as militants.

Another Taliban promise being closely watched is their vow to prevent Afghanistan from again being used as a base for planning terrorist attacks. That was enshrined in a 2020 peace deal with the Trump administration that paved the way for the drawdown of American troops, the last of whom are supposed to leave at the end of the month.

When the Taliban were last in power, they sheltered Osama bin Laden and his Al Qaeda group, which carried out the September 11, 2001, attacks. US officials fear Al Qaeda and other groups could reconstitute themselves in Afghanistan now that the Taliban are back in power.

Elsewhere in Afghanistan, the Taliban blew up a statue depicting Abdul Ali Mazari, a militia leader killed by the Taliban in 1996, when the group seized power from rival warlords.

Mazari was a champion of Afghanistan’s ethnic Hazara minority — Shias who were persecuted under the Sunni Taliban’s earlier rule. The act further raised concerns about whether the Taliban would make good on their promises, including not seeking revenge on those who have opposed them.

Economic challenges
In a sign of the difficulties any future Afghan government will face, the head of Afghanistan’s central bank said the country’s supply of physical US dollars is “close to zero”.

Afghanistan has some $9 billion in reserves, Ajmal Ahmady tweeted, but most are held outside the country, with some $7bn held in US Federal Reserve bonds, assets and gold.

Ahmady said the country did not receive a planned cash shipment amid the Taliban offensive.

“The next shipment never arrived,” he wrote. “Seems like our partners had good intelligence as to what was going to happen.”

He said the lack of US dollars will likely lead to a depreciation of the local currency, the afghani, hurting the country’s poor. Afghans have been lining up outside ATM machines for days, with many pulling out their life savings.

Ahmady said the Taliban will struggle to access the country’s reserves because of international sanctions.

The “Taliban won militarily — but now have to govern,” he wrote. “It is not easy.”
 
. . .
Alot more people got crushed under tires of c 17 on Kabul Airport
 
. . . . . .
I have first hand experience of aghans and i can tell u they are mostly trouble seekers and spoilers. They can only be controlled by danda. Taliban have been too lenient and they need to show them the danda so they become humans or else they become baboons very quickly.
 
. .
So they were killed because of a flag issue?

Rightly so. You should realize these are the areas where anti Pakistan proxies do their recruitment. Home ground of TTP and ISKP aswell, this will give you a clear indication from where TTP proxies were handled.
I am surprised by your reaction bro.
 
. .
They need proper riot police, with shields and batons, and less than lethal weapons. Perhaps some stun grenades if they captured them may help. Hiring back sole trained riot police from the Afghan police force may help, especially if they are locals to that city and can convince the people with words.
 
. .

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom