Taliban played Holi of blood in Afghanistan – killed 43 people: fierce battle in Kandahar

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Taliban played Holi of blood in Afghanistan - killed 43 people: fierce battle in Kandahar

Taliban played Holi of blood in Afghanistan – killed 43 people: fierce battle in Kandahar- The bloody game of the Taliban, which claims to have captured 90 percent of Afghanistan’s territory, continues. According to locals, Taliban militants killed 43 people in Ghazni. These include security forces and civilians. Fearing a horrific Taliban attack, thousands of civilians have left their homes and moved to Kabul, which is currently controlled by the government army. Because of the threat of the Taliban, the Afghan government has imposed a night curfew in many areas.

After fleeing Ghazni, a father who came to Kabul told that his two sons were shot by the Taliban. These people were neither government employees nor security personnel. Ghazni-based civil society activist Mina Naderi said, “Taliban terrorists entered the district of Malistan and committed war crimes. They killed people who were not fighting the war. The Taliban attacked people’s homes and looted them. They set the houses on fire.

22 thousand Afghan families fled

“The Taliban destroyed and looted shops in the center of the district of Malistan,” Mina said. Meanwhile, the Taliban has rejected this claim. Meanwhile, civilians have come under the grip of a fierce battle between the Taliban and the Afghan army in Kandahar. Because of this, 22 thousand Afghan families have fled. Kandahar has once been a stronghold of the Taliban and the Taliban have put their full force to capture it.

Right now the battle is going on in the outskirts of Kandahar city. It is being told that the police were negligent, due to which the Taliban came so close. Let us tell you that Taliban militants have declared that peace cannot be established in Afghanistan until the country’s President Ashraf Ghani leaves power. The Taliban also said it does not want a monopoly on power.

We don’t believe in a monopoly on power: Taliban

The Taliban have said that after Ghani’s withdrawal, a new government will have to be formed in the country through talks. Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen said this in an interview. Suhail Shaheen is also a member of the negotiation team. The spokesman said the Taliban would lay down arms when Ghani’s government is gone and take over a government that is acceptable to all parties involved in the conflict. Shaheen said, “I want to make it clear that we do not believe in a monopoly on power because no government which in the past intended to monopolize power in Afghanistan has proved to be a successful government.”

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