Taliban, IS 'jointly massacred' 50 civilians in Afghanistan

The Taliban and Islamic State group jointly massacred dozens of civilians in an Afghan village, officials said on Monday, highlighting rare co-operation between the insurgents.
2 min read
07 August, 2017
The fighters killed more than 50 men, women and children in the Sayad district [Anadolu]
The Taliban and Islamic State group jointly massacred dozens of civilians in an Afghan village, officials said on Monday.

It highlighted rare co-operation between the insurgents with more joint actions added further strains on Afghanistan's beleaguered security forces.

The fighters killed more than 50 men, women and children in a remote district in northern Afghanistan's Sar-e Pul province on Saturday after overrunning the Afghan Local Police (ALP) - a government-backed militia - following a 48-hour battle, local officials said.

"It was a joint operation by Daesh (IS) and Taliban fighters. They had recruited forces from other provinces of the country and attacked Mirzawalang village," Zabihullah Amani, a spokesman for the provincial governor, told AFP.

The spokesman alleged that dozens of Taliban and IS group fighters under the command of Sher Mohammed Ghazanfar - a local Taliban commander who Amani claims pledged allegiance to IS - launched a co-ordinated attack on the area on Thursday.

"The fighters overran the area and it led to the massacre of innocent and defenceless civilians," he said.

Most of those killed were shot but some were beheaded, Amani said.

Verifying information from poor, mountainous areas of Afghanistan made inaccessible by fighting and with patchy communications is difficult, and AFP was not able to access the village.

Mohammad Noor Rahmani, head of Sar-e-Pul's provincial council, said 44 of the 50 victims were believed to be civilians, with the ALP militia also suffering casualties.

"This is not the final toll. It might change because the area is inaccessible and no telephone networks are working to get an update," he told AFP.

The Taliban and Islamic State group fighters have regularly clashed since the latter gained a foothold in eastern Afghanistan in 2015, as the two vie for supremacy in the war-torn country.