The Taliban have taken over the Warduj district of Badakhshan,
east of Kunduz province, according to Fawzia
Koofi, one of the first women to be
elected to the Afghan parliament after the U.S. invasion of the country.
The Taliban
takeover in Warduj province represents a new setback for the Afghan government,
after the group reclaimed parts of the city of Kunduz earlier this week. That
was the biggest victory the Taliban has had in 15 years. Kunduz is a strategic
hub on the main highway between Kabul and Tajikistan.
Earlier
Thursday, Doctors Without Borders staff working in a hospital in Kunduz
were caught in the crossfire as the Taliban and Afghan security forces -- with
help from U.S. troops -- battled for control of the provincial capital.
The medical
staff bravely worked to treat the wounded as shells exploded and the ominous
sound of rockets filled the air. Bullets broke windows and pierced the roof of
the intensive care unit, Dr. Masood Nasim said.
"Our
hospital was on the front line, with fighting outside the gate," he said.
"But despite being in the middle of the fighting, our hospital and staff
have been respected and we've been able to carry on our work."
Nasim, the
medical team leader, said that since Monday -- when the Taliban said they had
seized control of Kunduz -- the hospital had received at least 296 patients,
including 64 children. Nearly 75 of them arrived in critical condition, and
many were shot, he said.
The facility has
a 92-bed capacity but the medical staff scrambled. They put patients in offices
and examination rooms and stabilized many on mattresses on the ground.
"Our
surgeons have been treating very severe abdominal wounds and limb and head
injuries," he said. "The hospital has been completely full of
patients."
While they
fought to save lives, competing narratives circulated over who was winning
Kunduz.
Early Thursday,
the Afghan government said it had reclaimed most of the city in a big operation
backed by U.S. airstrikes.
But hours later
there were signs that the Taliban were back in Kunduz, a resident told CNN.
Gunshots were heard near the airport, according to a resident who did not want
to be named for security reasons.
The U.S. role
U.S. Special Forces advisers in the
country said in a statement that Afghan Security Forces had Thursday
"encountered an insurgent threat in Kunduz" to which U.S. Special
Forces returned fire to "eliminate the threat."
The statement
stressed that Afghan Security Forces have full responsibility for their
operations in Kunduz, but U.S. service members have the right to protect
themselves.
At least 150
Taliban fighters were killed in Kunduz with 50 others dying in Baghlan and
Takhar,Afghan Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi tweeted.
The Khawja Ghar district was also retaken by Afghan forces, according to
Sediqqi.
Taliban
spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid insisted the militants weren't done fighting in the
city yet and had regained ground since the government's advance.
The Taliban
remain in control of at least two districts in the rest of Kunduz province.
The Taliban's takeover of Kunduz was the first time they had
driven government forces out of a provincial capital since the Islamic extremist
group was ousted from power in 2001.
The defeat
intensified doubts about Afghan troops' ability to take on the militants now
that the U.S.-led coalition has stepped back from front-line combat. It also
showed the Islamic extremist group's resilience despite recent internal
divisions under its new leader.
The Taliban attack Monday, in which government officials say the
militants cunningly "infiltrated" the city, was preceded by a
monthslong buildup of insurgent forces in the surrounding region. And yet the
Afghan security forces, who outnumbered their enemy, appeared unprepared or
unwilling to defend it.
After losing
Kunduz on Monday, Afghan troops initially struggled to retake it. Many of them
remained dug in at the airport on the outskirts of the city while the Taliban
prevented reinforcements from getting through from neighboring Baghlan
province.
The situation on
the ground in and around Kunduz has often appeared confused, with the Taliban
and the government both claiming to have gained ground and inflicted heavy
casualties on the other side.
The Afghan
Defense Ministry said the operation to retake the city had killed 150 Taliban
fighters. But it didn't provide any information about casualties on the
government side.
Hundreds of civilians wounded
Many civilians were caught up in the
fighting and thousands fled Kunduz, according to the United Nations. They left
by truck, rickshaw or horse -- and some on foot.
Nicholas Haysom, the U.N. special representative for
Afghanistan, said that under Taliban control of the city there were reports of
"extrajudicial executions, including of health care workers, abductions,
denial of medical care and restrictions on movement."
One male
resident of Kunduz told CNN on Wednesday that shops were closed, there was a citywide
power blackout and it was becoming difficult to find food.
"Kunduz has
turned into a ghost city," the man said, reporting that he had been hurt
by shrapnel after getting caught in a firefight. He spoke on condition of
anonymity, fearing retribution.
Pictures and
video posted to social media from Kunduz after the government said it had
retaken control showed citizens out on the streets.
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