Afghan Taliban rulers re-launched other passenger flights to Kabul on Sunday, as religious militants intensified attacks in the last remaining pocket led by militants who opposed their rule.

Activists fighting the Taliban in Panjshir province, north of Afghanistan's capital, are led by former vice president Amrullah Saleh, who has applied for help to help thousands of people displaced by the war.

A senior Taliban spokesman wrote on Twitter on Sunday that Taliban troops had passed through the Rokha region, one of the eight largest in Panjshir. Several Taliban envoys tried to negotiate with those in charge, but negotiations failed to get a draw.

Saleh fled to Panjshir after Afghan President Ashraf Ghani left Afghanistan during a Taliban march in the capital. Lightning strikes across the country took less than a week to evacuate some 300,000 government troops, many of whom surrendered or fled.


Since the takeover, the Taliban have been seeking to destabilize the party since the 1990s, when they retained control of the country and enforced strict control over the rest of society. Women and girls were denied employment and education, men were forced to grow beards, and television and music were banned.

Now, the world is waiting to see the face of a new government, and many Afghan people remain skeptical. In the weeks since taking office, signals have been mixed: civil servants, including women, have been asked to return to work, but some women have since been repatriated by the Taliban. Universities and schools have been ordered to reopen, but fears have kept students and teachers out.

The women protested peacefully, some even discussing their rights with Taliban leaders. But others were dispersed by special Taliban forces firing into the air.

Kabul streets were once again filled with traffic, with Taliban soldiers patrolling the country with trucks and police vehicles - loading their automatic weapons and flying a white Taliban flag.

However, other common signs have returned: street women, schools have opened, and money changers are working on street corners. The traffic police have returned to work, and large barricades cementing high-rise buildings have been removed.

With Taliban leaders holding meetings and promising the government in the coming days, technology teams from Qatar and Turkey are working to make the public airport operational.

On Saturday, state-owned company Ariana Airlines made its first domestic flights, which continued on Sunday. The airport does not have radar facilities, so flights are limited to daylight hours to allow for visible arrival, Kabul station manager Shershah Stor said.

Several countries have also been providing relief supplies. The Gulf country of Qatar, where the Taliban have held political office since 2013, flies daily to Kabul, bringing relief aid to a war-torn nation. Bahrain also announced the delivery of aid.


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