Taliban attack Kunduz, capture parts of the northeastern city

Afghan security forces gather at a street in Kunduz on August 31, 2019. (AFP)
Updated 31 August 2019
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Taliban attack Kunduz, capture parts of the northeastern city

  • Heavy fighting continues even as group closes in on peace deal with US

KABUL: Taliban fighters captured parts of the northeastern city of Kunduz on Saturday after a massive assault, despite representatives of the group inching closer to a peace deal with the US.

Ghulam Rabbani Rabbani, a member of the provincial council of Kunduz, told Arab News that the Taliban started their attack on security posts in the city’s outskirts at around 2 a.m.

“There is heavy fighting going on, the city is deserted almost except for some small shops in some alleys,” he said.

Helicopter gunships pounded some areas while jet fighters, apparently belonging to US-led NATO forces, hovered in the sky but did not appear to drop any ammunition, Rabbani said.

Government officials confirmed the attack on the city, where the Taliban has a significant presence. 

The group captured it briefly in 2015 and again the following year.

“The defense and security forces have preparedness to foil the Taliban attack on Kunduz city. The Taliban will face defeat like the past times,” Sediq Seddiqi, President Ashraf Ghani’s chief spokesman said.

Sayed Sarwar Hussieni, a spokesman for Kunduz police, said over 20 Taliban fighters were killed by one bomb dropped by the Afghan Air Force.

The Taliban claimed to have killed dozens of government troops. A video distributed by the group showed a group of armed men, dressed in military uniforms, surrendering to Taliban fighters after leaving what appeared to be a government building.

Electricity was cut and few mobile services were available, residents said.

A video on social media showed heavy fighting with children yelling in the background.

The attack on Kunduz comes amid a series of military gains by the group in recent weeks throughout the country.

The Taliban overran some areas in adjacent Takhar on Friday and last week seized one district in Badakhshan and some territory in Faryab province, which are far from its traditional center in the south and east.

Attiqullah Amarkhail, former chief of the Afghan Air Force, said the attack in Kunduz demonstrated an intelligence failure in Ghani’s divided government, which has been left out of talks between the Taliban and the US.

“It is a blow in many aspects, politically and militarily. It is the third time the Taliban gain ground in Kunduz and the government forces are not learning from their past mistakes,” he told Arab News.

“While the talks are nearing a final deal in Qatar, the Taliban attacked Kunduz in order to show their strength and further describe the Kabul government as incompetent,” he added.

A Taliban spokesman said its delegates and US diplomats will resume discussions on Saturday in Qatar.

The Taliban is demanding total expulsion of US-led troops from Afghanistan.


Italian suspect questioned over Bosnia ‘weekend sniper’ killings

Updated 11 min 34 sec ago
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Italian suspect questioned over Bosnia ‘weekend sniper’ killings

  • The octogenarian former truck driver from the Friuli-Venezia Giulia region of northeast Italy, is suspected by Milan prosecutors of “voluntary homicide aggravated by abject motives,” according to Italian news agency ANSA

ROME: An 80-year-old man suspected of being a “weekend sniper” who paid the Bosnian Serb army to shoot civilians during the 1990s siege of Sarajevo was questioned Monday in Milan, media reported.

The octogenarian former truck driver from the Friuli-Venezia Giulia region of northeast Italy, is suspected by Milan prosecutors of “voluntary homicide aggravated by abject motives,” according to Italian news agency ANSA.

Lawyer Giovanni Menegon told journalists that his client had answered questions from prosecutors and police and “reaffirmed his complete innocence.”

In October, prosecutors opened an investigation into what Italian media dubbed “weekend snipers” or “war tourists“: mostly wealthy, gun-loving, far-right sympathizers who allegedly gathered in Trieste and were taken to the hills surrounding Sarajevo where they fired on civilians for sport.

During the nearly four-year siege of Sarajevo that began in April 1992 some 11,541 men, women and children were killed and more than 50,000 people wounded by Bosnian Serb forces, according to official figures.

Il Giornale newspaper reported last year that the would-be snipers paid Bosnian Serb forces up to the equivalent of €100,000 ($115,000) per day to shoot at civilians below them.

The suspect — described by the Italian press as a hunting enthusiast who is nostalgic for Fascism — is said to have boasted publicly about having gone “man hunting.”

Witness statements, particularly from residents of his village, helped investigators to track the suspect, freelance journalist Marianna Maiorino said.

“According to the testimonies, he would tell his friends at the village bar about what he did during the war in the Balkans,” said Maiorino, who researched the allegations and was herself questioned as part of the investigation.

The suspect is “described as a sniper, someone who enjoyed going to Sarajevo to kill people,” she added.

The suspect told local newspaper Messaggero Veneto Sunday he had been to Bosnia during the war, but “for work, not for hunting.” He added that his public statements had been exaggerated and he was “not worried.”

The investigation opened last year followed a complaint filed by Italian journalist and writer Ezio Gavanezzi, based on allegations revealed in the documentary “Sarajevo Safari” by Slovenian director Miran Zupanic in 2022.

Gavanezzi was contacted in August 2025 by the former mayor of Sarajevo, Benjamina Karic, who filed a complaint in Bosnia in 2022 after the same documentary was broadcast.

The Bosnia and Herzegovina prosecutor’s office confirmed on Friday that a special war crimes department was investigating alleged foreign snipers during the siege of Sarajevo.

Bosnian prosecutors requested information from Italian counterparts at the end of last year, while also contacting the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals in The Hague, it said. That body performs some of the functions previously carried out by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.

Sarajevo City Council adopted a decision last month authorizing the current mayor, Samir Avdic, to “join the criminal proceedings” before the Italian courts, in order to support Italian prosecutors.