Officials say at least 100 Taliban militants killed in Afghan fighting

Officials say at least 100 Taliban militants killed in Afghan fighting

PanARMENIAN.Net - At least 100 Taliban militants have been killed in fighting around four military checkpoints in southern Afghanistan, local officials say, according to BBC News.

Five days of clashes in Sangin district in Helmand province left 35 civilians and at least 21 Afghan troops dead. Tribal elders in the area say over 2,000 families have been displaced.

Three U.S. soldiers died just last week in an explosion in Helmand. Last month, British troops left their last outpost, withdrawing to the Camp Bastion base.

Sangin district in northern Helmand is regarded as a strategic area as drug dealers and Taliban insurgents have been active in the area, and they often work together, reports the BBC says. The district lies on the border with Pakistan.

There is no independent confirmation of the number of dead. The militants said on Tuesday, June 24 that only two of their fighters had been killed and that more than 40 soldiers had died.

The Afghan government has sent additional troops to the area to support the military response, officials say. Estimates made by local Afghan officials of the total number of Taliban attackers vary from 800 to more than 1,000. Reports said the militants were heavily armed.

A local official in Helmand told the BBC that at one checkpoint police had fought hard - but with no reinforcements available immediately, the Taliban overran it.

Fighting has now extended from Sangin district into the neighbouring areas of Kajaki, Musa Qala and Nowzad.

"At least 21 Afghan forces have been killed and more than 40 wounded during five days of clashes in four districts," Said Omar Zwak, the spokesperson for the Helmand governor told the BBC.

Some of those civilians who fled the fighting walked long distances to the provincial capital, Lashkar Gah. Displaced people are reported to be sleeping in the open, amidst reports of a shortage of food and water in the city.

A tribal elder in Sangin told the BBC in Kandahar that locals faced fuel shortages and that prices had risen tenfold. "If the government can't do anything, then they have to gave us weapon to defend our villages and families," Haji Akhtar Mohammad said.

Last week three U.S. soldiers and a military dog were killed in an improvised explosive device attack in the Nad Ali district of Helmand.

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