The UAE face Sri Lanka in the semifinals of the Global qualifiers on Sunday. The winner of this match will qualify for this year's Women's T20 World Cup
cricket4 hours ago
The dry and dusty village of Aziz Abad sits on the frontline of Afghanistan’s war and is currently under government control — but only just.
Every night, 20-year-old paramilitary policeman Zainullah and his colleagues must seek refuge in filthy trenches at their battered outpost on the edge of the village while insurgents target them at an increasingly fierce tempo.
“The Taleban do not want peace,” said Zainullah.
“They are detonating landmines, roadside bombs, sticky bombs and launching rocket attacks.”
The village is located in Maiwand district — the scene of a notorious British military defeat in the 19th century — in Kandahar province, where the insurgents have kept control in some rural areas despite 19 years of war.
The insurgents are close to Zainullah’s makeshift base, where barbed wire fencing and shredded sandbags offer scant protection.
A walkie-talkie crackles as a police officer listens in on Taleban transmissions — he says the militants are discussing the unrecognised vehicles AFP is travelling in.
After months of US cajoling and concessions, the Taleban finally agreed to start peace talks with the Afghan government in September, but the hardliners have only stepped up attacks in the weeks since.
“Lots of our colleagues have been killed and many others wounded,” Zainullah said.
In late September, Taleban fighters crossed the frontline, reaching a nearby village called Deh Qubat before being pushed back.
“The Taleban were hiding behind walls, in houses and in the mosque. They were everywhere,” recalled Atta Jan, a 28-year-old farmer, who was having breakfast when militants stormed his street in Deh Qubat, a 35-minute drive from Aziz Abad.
Sardar, a farmer in Aziz Abad, said his mosque no longer offers evening prayers because of the volatile security situation.
Walls in his village have been destroyed by fighting and the roads are all but abandoned.
Separated by the war, some of Sardar’s family live under the Taleban, divided by a no man’s land of desert.
“All our families are split... for the past 18 years I have not seen their happiness or sorrow, I have not attended their funerals,” he said.
The peace talks came after the Taleban and Washington signed a deal in February, with the US agreeing to withdraw all foreign forces in exchange for security guarantees and a Taleban promise to start talks.
“Since the talks began, the fighting has intensified every day,” said Ahmad Ikhlas, a police commander with hearing damage from a recent Taleban truck bombing.
“One of our colleagues died in the explosion a couple of weeks ago. After the blast, I became deaf.”
Such scenes are playing out across Afghanistan, with the Taleban harassing Afghan army and police bases and launching large-scale attacks, including one on Lashkar Gah, the capital of neighbouring Helmand province.
The US Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) said in a report on Thursday that overall attacks against Afghan forces and civilians were up 50 per cent in the three months to the end of September, compared to the previous quarter.
And where Afghan forces around Aziz Abad could once rely on US military support, now they must increasingly fend for themselves.
“Now we don’t get air support,” grumbled Zainullah.
President Donald Trump has said he wants US troops out of Afghanistan as quickly as possible, and the Pentagon has seemed reluctant to strike the Taleban, publicly acknowledging only a handful of strikes since February.
So for many residents in Maiwand, which has seen constant violence since the Taleban’s ouster following the US-led invasion of 2001, peace seems unimaginable.
“The Taleban throw dust in the eyes of Americans — they make some deal with them but do not want peace,” said Khalil, a 26-year-old police officer who helped defend Deh Qubat.
He said he has relatives fighting on both sides of the conflict, and many who have died because of it.
Progress seen in other parts of the country since 2001 have hardly materialised in this unstable region. The first school for girls in Aziz Abad is still under construction.
Many of the people AFP spoke to see no end to Taleban influence, and the insurgent group has made clear it expects to be back in power before long.
Fourteen-year-old Malalai, who is already engaged, said she had missed her window to get an education.
“If I start now, I will be too old when I graduate,” she said.
For teenage cousins Mohibullah and Rafiullah, living on the frontline village of Deh Qubat has meant a lifetime of fear.
“Every night, there is fighting. My heart says peace will not come,” Mohibullah said.
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