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Afghan Officials: Taliban Attack Checkpoints, Kill 28 Police

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Afghan Officials: Taliban Attack Checkpoints, Kill 28 Police

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attacks, which it said were carried out after the police in the area refused to surrender.

Afghan Officials: Taliban Attack Checkpoints, Kill 28 Police
Credit: Wikimedia Commons

The Taliban launched a wave of attacks on security checkpoints in southern Afghanistan overnight, killing a total of 28 Afghan policemen, officials said Wednesday. 

The violence comes even as Taliban leaders and Afghan government-appointed negotiators are holding historic peace talks in Qatar, the Middle Eastern country where the Taliban set up a political office after they were toppled from power in the 2001 U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan. The negotiations, which started on September 12, are meant to end the fighting and establish a roadmap for a post-war society. 

According to the provincial governor’s spokesman, Zelgay Ebadi, the attacks started late Tuesday in southern Uruzgan province.

A Taliban spokesman, Qari Mohammad Yousuf Ahmadi, claimed responsibility for the attacks and said the insurgents carried them out after the police in the area refused to surrender.

Ebadi, meanwhile, said the policemen were killed after they had surrendered. The discrepancy in their accounts could not immediately be resolved. The remoteness of the area makes it impossible to independently verify either version of events.

Reinforcements were not able to get to the outposts to save the besieged officers but Ebadi said Afghan security forces were later back in charge of the checkpoints. The Taliban seized weapons found at the scene before fleeing the checkpoints. 

In the negotiations in Qatar, the two sides have so far have spent more than a week deciding agendas and the manner in which the two sides will be conducting the negotiations.

Both the government in Kabul and the United States have called for a reduction of violence while talks are being held in Qatar, but the Taliban have said they would not commit to a reduction of violence until the terms of a cease-fire are negotiated and resolved. Deep mistrust exists on both sides of the table.

By Tameem Akhgar for the Associated Press in Kabul, Afghanistan.