In Fallen Afghan City, Fires, Airstrikes and Victorious Taliban Taking Selfies
For two days, the Taliban battled Afghan government forces in the northern city of Kunduz, edging closer to its center. As shopkeeper Abdul Wahid ventured out for morning prayers on Sunday, he spotted Taliban fighters closing in on key government buildings.
Then, by 10 a.m. local time, it was
suddenly over.
The Taliban, relaxed and cheerful, began
to take selfies on the city’s main square, Sar-e-Chowk. They were now in
charge. “Congratulations, congratulations,” a bearded commander shouted from
the center of the square.
The city’s civilians, however, remained
mostly indoors. “The city was closed, but the Taliban hoisted their white flags
everywhere,” Mr. Wahid said. “There was a fire in the city center, and many of
the shops and markets were burning.”
Footage released on social media showed
Taliban fighters, wearing camouflage shalwar kameez and black slippers, driving
around in Ford Rangers that still had the markings of the Afghan National
Army—and white Taliban flags attached to the front grates.
One of the first items of business for
the insurgents was to open the gates of the Kunduz prison, freeing scores of
security detainees and common criminals, according to video footage and
witnesses. Later, an airstrike hit the local headquarters of the National
Directorate of Security, sending a thick plume of smoke into the sky, according
to Faisal Noori, head of the local Shabnam radio station. It wasn’t clear if
the aircraft was Afghan or American.
The biggest city in northeastern
Afghanistan, Kunduz had been seized by the Taliban twice before, in 2015 and
2016. Back then, however, Afghan commandos assisted by U.S. special-operations
forces and U.S. aircraft quickly repelled the insurgents. There was no such
expectation Sunday, and several residents said they believed the Taliban would
control the city for the long haul.
Provincial officials and remaining
government military units fled to the fortified airport compound south of the
city. While the Afghan ministry of defense said that operations to retake
Kunduz began Sunday afternoon, fighting so far centered on the outskirts near
the airport.
Inside the city, merchants tried to
rescue their goods from the carpet market and other shopping areas affected by
the fire.
“The
markets were burning, and there was no one to extinguish the fire,” said taxi
driver Ubaidullah, who usually takes passengers between Kunduz and Kabul.
On Sunday, he was turned back at a new
Taliban checkpoint on the road.
“I
hope to have a chance to take our family somewhere else” once the road reopens,
he added.
Dozens of people were reported killed in
Kunduz on Sunday as a result of the fighting and the fires. Many others were
injured.
“There is no
electricity and no water. The shops are closed and everyone is afraid,” said
teacher Ghulam Raza, who ran into scores of Taliban fighters on his street
early in the morning.
Habiba, a civil-society activist in
Kunduz, said that she has been trapped in a basement between the city center
and the airport, alongside three other families.
“The insurgents
have begun to check houses for government employees and civil-society
activists,” Habiba said, adding that she had tried to find a driver to flee to
Kabul but couldn’t afford it because all the taxis were charging several times
the normal price. In the early afternoon, a mortar shell hit a nearby house and
killed the father of the family there.
While spotty mobile-phone coverage still
remained in Kunduz, the lack of electricity meant that cellphone batteries were
getting discharged as the day progressed.
As dusk descended, Kunduz was falling
into isolation. Except for a rocket or two exploding every hour, there were no
signs of fighting to retake the city, Habiba said.
“Most
phones are off and not reachable,” she said. “Some of our friends and relatives
got stuck in the city apart from us. We still don’t know what they are going
through.”