Residents
say Afghan forces regain most of Kunduz, some shops reopen
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[October 05, 2015]
By Hamid Shalizi
KABUL (Reuters) - Police and residents
said Afghan government forces had regained control of most of the
besieged city of Kunduz on Monday, and some shops in the center of the
provincial capital opened for the first time since it fell to Taliban
fighters a week ago.Residents said it was the first time in eight days
that they had not heard gun battles and were able to leave their homes
to buy food and take stock of the damage done.
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Soldiers were conducting house-to-house searches as they continued
to push Islamist insurgents out of areas that had witnessed fierce
fighting, with control of pockets of the city swinging several times
between the Taliban and Afghan army."The center of the city is
normal," said Abdul Ghafoor, a Kunduz resident, but added it would
still take time to recover.
"The city smells so bad with dead bodies still on the pavements and
in the sewage. The local government must do something."Battles have
raged around Kunduz, a strategic city of 300,000, as government
forces backed by U.S. air strikes sought to drive out Taliban
militants, who seized the city a week ago in one of their biggest
victories in the 14-year insurgency.
The U.S. government said it was investigating whether its military
was responsible for an air strike that killed 22 people in an Afghan
hospital run by aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres on Saturday.
The U.N. human rights chief said the hospital assault was
"inexcusable" and could amount to a war crime.The U.S. military said
it conducted an air strike "in the vicinity" of the MSF hospital as
it targeted Taliban insurgents who were directly firing on U.S.
military personnel. It has not acknowledged hitting the hospital.Any
confirmation of U.S. responsibility for the hospital deaths would
deal a blow to Afghan President Ashraf Ghani's policy of forging
closer ties with the United States.
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His predecessor, Hamid Karzai, fell out with his backers in
Washington, in part over the number of civilians killed by U.S.
strikes.While the government has claimed to have regained control of
the city before, and fighting has continued, weary residents were
hopeful that the worst of the violence may now be over. "It is going
to take a long time for the city to return to normality again," said
Abdullah, a Kunduz resident. "People are still very scared to come
out."
(Writing by Andrew MacAskill; Editing by Mike Collett-White)
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