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26 Afghan soldiers killed in Taliban attack on Kandahar base: MoD

26 Afghan soldiers killed in Taliban attack on Kandahar base: MoD
An internally-displaced Afghan woman and children who left their homes following a mass-kidnapping by suspected militants look on after arriving from the district of Shawali Kowt following in Kandahar on July 23, 2017. Afghan police on July 23 launched a search for some 30 villagers still missing two days after a mass kidnapping blamed on Taliban militants in the southern province of Kandahar. Seventy people were abducted July 21 from their village along the main road in the south and seven of them were found dead the following day alongside the highway, from the city of Kandahar to Tarinkot in Uruzgan province. On July 23 dozens of families from the affected area who arrived in Kandahar city blamed the insurgents for forcing them out of their villages. (AFP)
Updated 26 July 2017

26 Afghan soldiers killed in Taliban attack on Kandahar base: MoD

26 Afghan soldiers killed in Taliban attack on Kandahar base: MoD

AFGHANISTAN: At least 26 Afghan soldiers have been killed and 13 wounded in a Taliban attack on a military base in Kandahar province, the defense ministry said Wednesday, the latest blow to struggling security forces.
The militants “attacked an army camp in Karzali area of Khakrez district of Kandahar last night,” MoD spokesman General Dawlat Waziri said.
Afghan soldiers “bravely resisted,” he said, killing more than 80 insurgents.
Residents in the area described an hours-long attack launched by a 30-strong convoy carrying “hundreds” of Taliban who assaulted the base from multiple directions.
Air support was called in, several residents told AFP, though that was not immediately confirmed by officials. The insurgents claimed the attack via their Twitter account.
The resurgent Taliban have been ramping up their campaign against beleaguered government forces, underscoring rising insecurity in the war-torn country throughout the warmer weather fighting season.
Afghan security forces, beset by killings, desertions and non-existent “ghost soldiers” on the payroll, have been struggling to beat back insurgents since US-led NATO troops ended their combat mission in December 2014.
According to US watchdog SIGAR, casualties among Afghan security forces soared by 35 percent in 2016, with 6,800 soldiers and police killed.
The insurgents have carried out more complex attacks against security forces in 2017.
In April more than 140 soldiers are believed to have been killed on a base outside the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif, one of the deadliest ever Taliban attacks on a military installation.
While in early March gunmen disguised as doctors stormed the Sardar Daud Khan hospital — the country’s largest military hospital — in Kabul, killing dozens.