Taliban kill at least 13 Afghan police despite peace talks

Published May 5, 2015
In this photograph taken on May 3, 2015, Afghan National Army soldiers prepare to fire during a battle with Taliban insurgents in Kunduz.  Intense fighting flared in northern Afghanistan as security forces battled Taliban insurgents advancing  on a major provincial capital, officials said, with terrified residents fearing the fall of the besieged city. — AFP
In this photograph taken on May 3, 2015, Afghan National Army soldiers prepare to fire during a battle with Taliban insurgents in Kunduz. Intense fighting flared in northern Afghanistan as security forces battled Taliban insurgents advancing on a major provincial capital, officials said, with terrified residents fearing the fall of the besieged city. — AFP

KUNDUZ: Taliban militants killed at least 13 policemen after storming security outposts in Afghanistan's remote mountainous northeast, officials said Tuesday, despite peace talks between insurgent representatives and an Afghan delegation.

The pre-dawn raid in Badakhshan province on Monday came just weeks after a similar Taliban raid on army checkpoints in the province in which 18 soldiers were killed -- including some who were beheaded.

“Enemies of peace and stability of Afghanistan attacked police posts in Warduj district of Badakhshan,” the interior ministry said in a statement.

Also read: Afghan representatives agree on reopening Taliban political office

“Thirteen of our policemen were martyred and 17 were wounded,” it said, adding that 10 policemen who went missing had returned to their posts.

Noor Mohammad Khawri, the health director of Badakhshan, gave a higher death toll, saying health authorities received the bodies of 18 border policemen and eight others who were wounded.

The Taliban, who launched their annual spring offensive late last month, claimed responsibility for the attack. It marks another grim setback for Afghan forces, facing their first fighting season without full Nato support.

Also read: Fighting flares as Taliban advance towards Kunduz

Nato's combat mission formally ended in December but a small follow-up foreign force of about 12,500 mainly US troops has stayed on to train and support local security personnel.

Monday's attack comes after a 20-member Afghan delegation last weekend launched two days of “open discussion” in Qatar with representatives of the Taliban, ousted from power by a 2001 US-led invasion of Afghanistan.

The Taliban reiterated their hardline stance on peace talks, ruling out negotiations until US forces leave the country and the insurgents are allowed to open a political office.

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