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Taliban Take Over Kabul, President Ashraf Ghani Flees Afghanistan

AsiaTaliban Take Over Kabul, President Ashraf Ghani Flees Afghanistan

President Ashraf Ghani has left the country with his core team, TOLO News stated on Sunday as Taliban terrorists entered capital Kabul.

A tweet from the Afghan Presidential palace account reported that firing had been heard at a number of points around Kabul but that security forces, in coordination with international partners, had control of the city.

A senior interior ministry official told Reuters the Taliban rebels were coming “from all sides” into the capital but gave no further details. There were no reports of fighting.

The United States evacuated diplomats from its embassy by helicopter and a government minister said control would be handed over to an interim administration.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement that the group was in talks with the government for a peaceful surrender of Kabul.

“Taliban fighters are to be on standby on all entrances of Kabul until a peaceful and satisfactory transfer of power is agreed,” the statement said. The entry into the capital caps a lightning advance by the Taliban who were ousted from Kabul 20 years ago by the United States after the September 11 attacks

The collapse of the Afghan government defense has astonished diplomats — just last week, a US intelligence estimate said Kabul could hold out for at least three months.

Power would be handed over to a transitional administration, the government’s acting interior minister, Abdul Sattar Mirzakawal, said in a tweet on the Tolo news channel. “There won’t be an attack on the city, it is agreed that there will be a peaceful handover,” he said without elaborating.

The head of the Taliban’s political bureau, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, is traveling to Kabul from Doha, a Taliban source in the Qatari capital said. A tweet from the Afghan presidential palace account said the firing had been heard at a number of locations around Kabul but that security forces, in coordination with international partners, had control of the city.

Kabul’s streets were overflowing with cars and thousands of people were either trying to rush home or reach the airport, residents said. “Some people have left their keys in the car and have started walking to the airport,” one resident told Reuters by phone.

Another said: “People are all going home in fear of fighting.” Afghans have fled the provinces to enter Kabul in recent days, fearing a return to hardline Islamist rule.

Early on Sunday, refugees from Taliban-controlled provinces were seen unloading belongings from taxis and families stood outside embassy gates, while the city’s downtown was packed with people stocking up on supplies.

US officials said diplomats were being transported by helicopters to the airport from its embassy in the fortified Wazir Akbar Khan district. More American troops were being sent to help in the evacuations after the Taliban’s surge brought the Islamist group to Kabul in a matter of days. “Core” US team members were working from the Kabul airport, a US official said, while a NATO official said several EU staff had moved to a safer, undisclosed location in the capital. Earlier on Sunday, the terrorists captured the eastern city of Jalalabad without a fight, giving them control of one of the main highways into landlocked Afghanistan.

They also took over the nearby Torkham border post with Pakistan, leaving Kabul airport the only way out of Afghanistan that is still in government hands. “There are no clashes taking place right now in Jalalabad because the governor has surrendered to the Taliban,” a Jalalabad-based Afghan official told Reuters. “Allowing passage to the Taliban was the only way to save civilian lives.”

In a statement late on Saturday, the Taliban said its rapid gains showed it was popularly accepted by the Afghan people and reassured both Afghans and foreigners that they would be safe.

The Islamic Emirate, as the Taliban calls itself, “will, as always, protect their life, property, and honor, and create a peaceful and secure environment for its beloved nation,” it said, adding that diplomats and aid workers would also face no problems.

Mr Biden said his administration had told Taliban officials in talks in Qatar that any action that put US personnel at risk “will be met with a swift and strong US military response.” He has faced rising domestic criticism as the Taliban have taken city after city far more quickly than predicted. The US president has stuck to a plan, initiated by his Republican predecessor, Donald Trump, to end the US military mission in Afghanistan by August 31. Mr Biden said it is up to the Afghan military to hold its own territory.

“An endless American presence in the middle of another country’s civil conflict was not acceptable to me,” American President Joe Biden said on Saturday. Qatar, which has been hosting so-far inconclusive peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban, said it had urged the terrorists to a ceasefire.

However, when Mr. Biden was senator, he voted for the war in Afghanistan, so he should have finished what he stood for, many people feel.  This will also be noted as the biggest military defeat in American history, and also dissertation of the Afghanis in their blackest hour. It is anticipated that many more will be killed, which is why thousands are fleeing for their lives.

 

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