Dozens
of Afghan troops defect to Taliban in Helmand fighting
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[November 14, 2015]
LASHKAR GAH, Afghanistan (Reuters) -
At least 65 Afghan soldiers have defected to the Taliban, taking their
weapons and equipment with them and 88 have been killed in days of heavy
fighting in the volatile southern province of Helmand, the local
provincial Governor said on Saturday.
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The latest losses underline the heavy toll being exacted on Afghan
security forces, now fighting largely alone since international
troops ended most combat operations last year.
Police and soldiers have been engaged in near-continuous combat with
insurgents for the past three weeks in the districts of Lashkar Gah,
Marjah and Nadali in Helmand, one of the Islamist movement's
traditional strongholds.
Although they have so far repelled Taliban efforts to take the
provincial capital Lashkar Gah, they have not been able to push back
the insurgents decisively from areas around the city.
"Soldiers from an Afghan army brigade in Station area have joined
the Taliban with their equipment and weapons," Helmand Governor
Mirza Khan Rahimi said. He said a team had been sent to the town of
Sangin to investigate the incident.
Taliban spokesman Qari Yousuf Ahmadi said in a statement that five
commanders and 65 army soldiers "repented their mistakes and
surrendered to Mujahideen", bringing five armored personnel carriers
as well as weapons and ammunition.
Since the fall of the key northern city of Kunduz, which the Taliban
briefly took over in September, the government of President Ashraf
Ghani has come under mounting pressure over the worsening security
situation.
Thousands demonstrated in Kabul this week demanding action after
seven members of the Hazara ethic minority were brutally executed by
Islamist militants.
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On Saturday, more than 1,000 people demonstrated in the western city
of Herat, officials said.
Afghan officials say the sharp reduction in surveillance and close
air support to troops on the ground has weighed particularly heavily
since U.S. forces cut their operational support to their Afghan
allies.
President Ashraf Ghani repeated the need to strengthen Afghan air
defenses when he spoke by video conference with U.S. Secretary of
Defense Ash Carter on Friday.
(Reporting by Mohammad Stanekzai and Mirwais Harooni; Writing by
James Mackenzie; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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