KABUL: The Afghan Taliban authorities continued several domestic passengers to and from Kabul on Sunday, when religious militia fighters increased the attack on the last resistance bag led by fighters who opposed their rules.
The anti-Taliban fighters in the province of Panjshir, in the north of the Afghan capital, were being led by former Vice President Amrullah Saleh, who had appealed for humanitarian aid to help thousands of people displaced by the battle.
A Senior Taliban spokesman tweeted Sunday that Taliban troops have beaten Rokha District, one of the eight largest regencies in Panjshir.
Some Taliban delegates have tried negotiations with Holdout there, but talks failed to get traction.
Saleh fled to Panjshir after Afghan President Ashraf Ghani came out of Afghanistan when the Taliban marched in the capital.
Blitz fighters throughout the country took less than a week to beat around 300,000 government forces, which mostly gave up or escape.
Since takeover, the Taliban has tried to reapply the group as different from the 1990s, when they last ruled the country and imposed strict control throughout the community.
Women and girls are rejected work and education, men are forced to grow a beard, and television and music are prohibited.
Now, the world is waiting to see the face of a new government, and many Afghans remain skeptical.
Within weeks since they took power, signals have diverse: Government employees including women have been asked to return to work, but some women are then ordered home with a low ranking Taliban.
Universities and schools have been booked open, but fear has distanced students and teachers.
Women have shown peacefully, some even make conversations about their rights with Taliban leaders.
But some have spread by the Taliban special forces who shot in the air.
Kabul roads are clogged back with traffic, such as Taliban fighters patrolting pickup trucks and police vehicles – brandishing their automatic weapons and flying the white flag of the Taliban.
However, some normal signs have returned: women are on the streets, schools have been opened, and looking for money working in street corners.
Traffic police have returned to the task, and the giant cement barrier sealing the upper class environment has been removed.
As the Taliban leader holds a meeting and promises the government in the coming days, the technical team from Qatar and Turkey works to get the operational of civil airports.
On Saturday, Ariana Airlines managed by the government made his first domestic flight, which continued on Sunday.
This airport is without radar facilities, so flights are limited during the day to allow visual landings, said Kabul Shershah Station Station.
Some countries have also brought humanitarian equipment.
The State of the Qatar Bay, where the Taliban defended the political office since 2013, made daily flights to Kabul, providing humanitarian assistance for tired countries of war.
Bahrain also announced the shipment of humanitarian aid.