Fighting is raging across several provinces, but the militants have primarily focused on a devastating campaign across the northern countryside.
Afghan authorities have deployed hundreds of commandos and pro-government militiamen to counter the Taliban's blistering offensive in the north.
The deployment on Tuesday comes as several countries said that they had restricted consular services in Afghanistan keeping in view the changing security dynamics.
Fighting has raged across several provinces, but the militants have primarily focused on a devastating campaign across the northern countryside, seizing dozens of districts in the past two months.
The surge in Taliban wins has caused some countries to close their consulates in the region, while across the border in Tajikistan, reservists are being called up to reinforce the southern border, according to officials and reports on Tuesday.
Nearly 1,000 Afghan soldiers have fled into Tajikistan, while others have surrendered as the Taliban gain large swathes of the region.
A statement on Monday from the Tajik government said President Emomali Rakhmon ordered the mobilisation of 20,000 military reservists to strengthen its border with Afghanistan.
261 #Taliban terrorists were killed and 206 others were wounded as a result of #ANDSF operations in Laghman, Nangarhar, Paktika, Kandahar, Zabul, Badghis, Balkh, Jowzjan, Helmand, Badakhshan, Kunduz & Kapisa provinces during the last 24 hours. pic.twitter.com/Af5o74XfVn
— Fawad Aman (@FawadAman2) July 6, 2021
Consulates closed
The consulates of Turkey and Russia have reportedly closed in Mazar-e-Sharif, the capital of northern Balkh province, and Afghanistan's fourth-largest city.
Iran said it has restricted activities at its consulate in the city.
There has been fighting in Balkh province, but the provincial capital has been relatively peaceful.
The consulates of Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, India and Pakistan have reduced their services, Balkh provincial governor's spokesman Munir Farhad said Tuesday.
He said Turkey and Russia had closed their consulates and their diplomats had left the city.
Watch: Afghans take up arms against Taliban across the country. #Afghanistan pic.twitter.com/mZtrNxAVKt
— RTA World (@rtaworld) July 4, 2021
Peace talks
Months-old peace talks being held in Qatar between Taliban and a fractious Afghan government have all but stopped, even as both sides say they want a negotiated end to the decades-long conflict.
With their victories in northern and southern Afghanistan, the Taliban are putting pressure on provincial cities and gaining control of key transportation routes.
The Afghan government has resurrected militias mostly loyal to Kabul-allied warlords but with a history of brutal violence that has raised the specter of civil war, similar to the fighting that devastated Kabul in the early 1990s.
Taliban wins in northern Afghanistan are particularly significant because that part of the country is the traditional stronghold of US-allied warlords and the scene of the Taliban's initial widespread losses in 2001 when the US-led coalition launched its battle to unseat the religious movement.
SOURCE ; TRT WORLD
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