Taliban seizes Afghan villages
Group of about 500 fighters threaten to march towards Kandahar in new offensive.

The Taliban offensive follows the escape of more than 1000 Taliban and other prisoners in a suicide attack on the main jail in the southern city of Kandahar on Friday night, which also left many prison guards dead.
Mark Laity, a Nato spokesman, said that Nato and Afghan military officials were redeploying troops to the region to “meet any potential threats”.
“It’s fair to say that the jailbreak has put a lot of people [fighters] into circulation who were not there before, and so obviously you’re going to respond to that potential threat,” he said.
Al Jazeera’s Hashem Ahelbarra, reporting from Kandahar, said that hundreds of Taliban fighters are taking up positions in the area and taking over nearby villages.
“Ultimately, it is local residents who are paying a heavy price for this increasing instability,” he said.
“The Taliban are showing impressive capability in manoeuvring in and around the area.”
An interior ministry statement said on Monday the student was on his way to school in the Yaqoubi district of eastern Khost province when he was killed a day earlier.
Both wounded were receiving treatment in hospital, he said.
The Taliban have stepped up an insurgency against Karzai’s US-backed government since being removed from power in late 2001, resulting in the loss of thousands of lives.