Taliban targeted near Kandahar
Joint Afghan-Nato operation aims to force anti-government fighters from villages.

The British defence ministry confirmed the deaths in Helmand province on Wednesday, saying that one of those who died was a female soldier.
She is the first British female soldier to die in Afghanistan.
Roads blocked
The Arghandab operation began at 8am local time [0300 GMT], the Afghan defence ministry said.
Mark Laity, a Nato spokesman in Kabul, told Al Jazeera: “The operation is pretty much on track.
“There have been a number of engagements with the insurgents, but they have been minor rather than major battles.
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“We have killed some insurgents but we have not yet suffered any Isaf [the International Security Assistance Force] casualties.”
The number of troops involved in the operation is “substantial”, Laity said.
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“This is a joint operation … everyone is playing their role and we are seeing very good co-ordination and implementation of this operation,” Bashari said.
The Taliban said it met no resistance as it took control of the villages.
Ahelbarra said on Tuesday that hundreds of Taliban fighters had taken up positions in the area.
It was unclear if the group was just trying to make a statement as it did late last year when it captured the same area for just a few days before retreating under heavy bombardment, or if it would try to take back control of large swaths of the country.
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The Taliban freed about 1,000 inmates from a prison in Kandahar last week [AFP] |
As soon as news of the Taliban takeover circulated, residents fled their villages, some of them with cattle and all their belongings. The Taliban encouraged them to leave.
“We left the area to protect ourselves from the bombing and the risks of a military confrontation. There are many Taliban fighters – some told us they are more than 800,” one resident said.
Gholam Razeq, the district chief of Arghandab, said “the enemy wants to create insecurity in Arghandab which was the most secure area”.
Haji Ikramullah Khan, a tribal leader from the region, cautioned that the Taliban fighters could use the cover of the district’s grape and pomegranate orchards to mount an attack on Kandahar itself.