The Taliban on Monday claimed victory in Panjshir province north of Kabul, which is the last Taliban refuge in the country and that is why it is the only Taliban province that has not been allocated during their war in Afghanistan last month.
Thousands of Taliban militants are on high alert in eight Panjshir provinces overnight, according to local witnesses who spoke out on condition of anonymity, fearing for his safety. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told the media on Monday that Panjshir was now under Taliban insurgency.
The anti-Taliban forces were led by former vice-president Amrullah Saleh, so the son of Taliban activist Ahmad Shah Massoud, who was killed a few days before the 9/11 terrorist attacks among us.
Meanwhile in the northern province of Balkh, at least four planes have been hired to evacuate several hundred people who want to evacuate the Taliban take Afghanistan for days that have failed to travel the country for days, officials said on Sunday. they fled.
An Afghan official at the airport in the city of Mazar-e-Sharif, the capital, said the would-be passengers were Afghan people, most of whom did not have passports or visas, so they could not leave the country. . Speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to reporters, he said they had left the airport while things were being prepared.
A senior Republican on the United States House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, however, said the group was occupied by Americans and that they were sitting on planes, but the Taliban were not allowing them to leave, "deliberately holding them hostage." Lawyer Michael McCaul of Texas told "Fox News Sunday" that Americans and Afghan translators were detained on six planes.
McCaul did not say where this information came from and it would not have been possible immediately to link the 2 accounts.
The last days of the 20-year US war in Afghanistan have been marked by a horrific plane at Kabul airport to release tens of thousands of people - Americans and their allies - who have long feared, given the history of Taliban oppression, especially women. When the last American troops left on August 30, however, many were left behind.