KABUL: Taliban fighters tightened their control of the area captured in North Afghanistan on Tuesday when residents hid in their homes and a pro-government commander vowed to fight to death to defend Mazar-I-Sharif, the largest city in the north.
President Ashraf Ghani called a strong regional person to support his government which was fought after a series of amazing Taliban and when the United States said it was up to Ghani’s troops to defend himself.
In the city of AIBAK, the capital of the province of Sisangan on the main road between Mazar-I-Sharif and the National Capital, Kabul, Taliban fighters consolidated their grip, moved to government buildings, said residents.
Most members of government security forces appear to have been withdrawn from the city, said residents, when they continued from the streets.
“The only way is the arrest of a forced house or to find a way to go to Kabul,” said Sher Mohamed Abbas, the Provincial Tax Office, when asked about the condition of life in the city.
“But even Kabul is not a safe choice again,” Abbas said, a father of four children and the only bread winner for a nine-year family.
Abbas said the Taliban had arrived at his office and told workers to go home.
He and other residents said they did not see or hear battle on Tuesday.
Taliban, struggled to defeat the government supported by U.
and re-handle strict Islamic law, sweeping the aibak on Monday to meet a little resistance.
Taliban and government officials have confirmed that Islamists have flooded six provincial capitals in the last few days in the north, west and south.
‘Dead in the dignity of the militants, was overthrown in a few weeks after the attack on September 11, 2001, in the United States, was in a position to advance from a different direction in the largest city in the region, Mazar-I-Sharif.
The fall will handle a devastating blow to the Ghani government in Kabul.
Atta Mohammad Noor, a North Militi commander, vowed to fight until the end, said there would be a “resistance until my last drop of blood”.
“I prefer to die in dignity than die in despair,” he said on Twitter.
In Kabul, Ghani’s helpers said he was looking for assistance from regional militias he had quarreled for years to depend on his government defense.
He also appealed to civilians to defend the country’s “democratic cloth”, said Aides.
The United States will complete the withdrawal of its troops at the end of this month with an agreement with the Taliban, which includes the withdrawal of foreign troops in exchange for Taliban promises to prevent Afghanistan from being used for international terrorism.
Under the agreement, the Taliban was intended to seek peace with the Ghani government but months of intermittent talks have produced results.
Government officials have appealed the pressure on Pakistan to stop the reinforcements and supplies of Taliban flowing on the porous border.
Pakistan denied supporting the Taliban.
The United States said it was up to the Afghan security forces to defend their country.
“This is their country to survive now.
This is their struggle,” John Kirby, spokesman for the Pentagon, told reporters on Monday.