Taliban Capture Northern Afghan District Amid Surge in Violence

Taliban insurgents captured a district in northern Afghanistan, forcing government troops to retreat to the provincial capital amid a recent surge in violence, officials said on Wednesday.
Fighting
has escalated sharply in recent weeks, with Afghan officials saying the Taliban
have stepped up their attacks since Washington announced plans last month to
pull out all US troops by Sept. 11.
The
militants seized the district of Barka in the northern province of Baghlan
after hours of fighting with Afghan forces, who retreated to the main city,
said Jawed Basharat, a spokesman for the provincial police.
The
Taliban suffered heavy losses in the fighting, he added, but a senior security
official who sought anonymity said at least 10 security forces were killed and
16 others captured by the Taliban.
The
district fell a day after Afghan security forces fought back a major Taliban
offensive in the southern province of Helmand.
The
Afghan government says it has recorded more than 100 Taliban attacks on
security forces and other government installations in 26 of the 34 provinces
over the last 24 hours.
The
Taliban overran a small outpost on a highway in Baghlan, killing nine Afghan
soldiers and wounding several, regional officials said on Tuesday.
Kabul
police spokesman Ferdaws Faramarz said one person was killed and three wounded
when a roadside bomb hit a vehicle belonging to a health official outside the
city.
Another
roadside bomb killed a district police commander in the southeastern province
of Paktika on Tuesday, officials said.
Although the United States missed a May 1 withdrawal deadline agreed in talks with the Taliban last year, its pull-out has begun.
Critics
of President Joe Biden's decision to withdraw say the militants will try to
sweep back into power.
The
hardline group now holds sway over more territory than at any point since its
ouster by US-led troops after the attacks of Sept. 11 on the United States in
2001.