On Afghanistan’s Front Line, There Are No Good
Choices
For the past month, Kandahar, Afghanistan’s
second-largest city, has been under siege by Taliban fighters. Families stuck
between them and government forces have almost nowhere to go.
By Thomas
Gibbons-Neff and Fahim AbedPhotographs by Jim Huylebroek
Aug. 9,
2021
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/09/world/asia/Afghanistan-taliban-kandahar.html
KANDAHAR,
Afghanistan — As the first chatter of gunfire began, a police unit tested its
heavy machine gun. The gunner pointed the barrel in the vicinity of the Taliban
front line and fired in an ear-shattering clap clap clap. Where the bullets
landed was anyone’s guess.
The sun was
just slipping behind the horizon and the call to prayer began to echo through
Kandahar city. The police unit, embedded on the edge of a neighborhood made up
of mostly tan, mud brick houses and low-slung shops, prepared for another long
night.
At
midnight, the 29-year-old police commander said, was when “the real game
begins.”
Since the
U.S. withdrawal began in May, the Taliban have captured more than half of
Afghanistan’s 400-odd districts. And for the past month, Kandahar, the second
largest city in Afghanistan, has been under siege by Taliban fighters in what
may be the most important fight for the country’s future so far.
Security
forces have tried to hold them off as other provincial capitals have fallen
elsewhere, including Kunduz, the largest city to be captured by the Taliban. In
the last four days alone, insurgents seized six capitals, opening a bloody new
chapter in the war and further revealing how little control the government has
over the country without the backing of the American military.
The
insurgents are desperate to capture Kandahar, as the Taliban first took root in
its neighboring districts in the 1990s before seizing the city itself and
announcing their emirate. And the government is desperate to defend Kandahar, a
symbol of the state’s reach and an economic hub essential for trade to and from
Pakistan through its checkpoints, bridges and highways.
On a warm
evening earlier this month, both Afghan and Taliban flags flew atop a nearby
mountain, a Buddhist-turned-Islamic shrine cut into its side — the clearest
marker of Kandahar’s western front line.
To the east
of the mountain, a mix of Afghan army, commando and special police units were
desperately trying to hold the city, despite being exhausted, underfed and
underequipped.
The
government’s front line begins in the neighborhood of Sarposa, where the
Taliban are trying to seize a prison that they also attacked in 2008, in a raid
that freed roughly 1,200 inmates.
Nearby, the
bursts of gunfire and crump of explosions signal Raz Mohammed, 23, to begin his
nightly routine of moving his four children to the basement. He turns on an
aging floor fan to try and dim the sounds of war long enough for them to get a
few hours of sleep.
The rusty
appliance is a tepid defense against the hellaciously loud firefights that have
dragged on night after night in Kandahar. The fighting is especially fierce
around Sarposa. There, the Taliban have dug in, using people’s homes and
whatever terrain they can for cover.
In the
beginning, Mr. Mohammed’s sons and daughters screamed out in terror whenever
the shooting began, but now the violence has become routine. Many of their
neighbors have already fled for more secure parts of the city. But so far Mr.
Mohammed has chosen to stay; his home has been in his family for 60 years.
And he has
nowhere else to go.
“If I
leave, I’ll have to live on the street,” said Mr. Mohammed, his sons around
him, loitering in the shade of a shop that he owns.
But as each
night ruptures with rocket strikes and gunfire, he knows his family will be
forced to leave if the bombardment gets any closer. They will be able to spend
a few nights at most at his relatives’ already-cramped house before ending up
in one of the half-dozen or so refugee camps that have sprung up around the
city, barren, devoid of enough water and food and oppressively hot.
This is the
stark choice for thousands of families in one of Afghanistan’s most prominent
metropolises and also for many spread across large swaths of the country —
though Kandahar is a city whose historical and strategic significance have
turned it into a symbolic focal point for both the Taliban and government’s
military campaigns.
“I just
want this uncertainty to end,” Mr. Mohammed said, the morning after another
long battle just a few hundred yards from his home.
Sulaiman
Shah lived just blocks from Mr. Mohammed, in a different neighborhood that was
enveloped by the Taliban’s recent advance. Last month, the short and wiry
20-year-old made the decision that Mr. Mohammed has so far resisted.
When the
fighting got too close, he fled his home with his wife and months-old son,
finding sanctuary in a refugee camp near the airport in the eastern part of
Kandahar, far from the front lines. His family now lives inside a tent made of
a tarp and tied-together scarves.
Every day
he waits in line for water dispensed from a silver tank that is infrequently
refilled and far from enough for the camp’s roughly 5,000 residents who must
endure temperatures that regularly break triple digits.
This camp
was hastily organized in what was earlier the provincial office for the
Ministry of Hajj and Religious Affairs. Government officials said it had ample
space after being closed during the coronavirus pandemic, with enough toilets
for the influx of displaced people in the city and the surrounding districts.
For now, that means one toilet per 60 people.
No
international assistance has reached any of the city’s refugee camps yet.
Volunteers, backed by a local parliamentarian, peel fly-covered potatoes that
they cook and distribute later in the day. The grounds are an unorganized mess
of homemade tents, families sprawled out on the ground and an empty government
building that reeks of human excrement.
“If they
want to help us, they should stop fighting in our neighborhood so we can go
back to our homes,” Mr. Shah said in a simple plea to the government, standing
beside what few belongings he managed to take with him.
Back in
Sarposa, Atta Mohammed, 63, a staunch and battered father of 12 children who so
far has opted to stay in his home, has tried to stop the war on his own terms,
at least by negotiating with the Afghan forces arrayed directly behind his
home.
Trapped
between government and Taliban lines on the edge of the neighborhood, Atta
Mohammed, who is of no relation to Raz Mohammed, has made a simple request to
those troops: Stop shooting.
“We don’t
care who is ruling,” Atta Mohammed said from a shaded alleyway next to his home
of 46 years. “I just want to be on one side or the other.”
Atta
Mohammed’s shops were destroyed soon after the fighting began last month. And,
like many in the neighborhood who have refused to leave, he fears that he or
one of his children could become the victim of the fighting, like many of the
hundreds of civilians who have already been killed or injured, according to the
United Nations.
Just a week
or so ago, a blind burst of gunfire in Sarposa had struck a 10-year-old boy in
the head.
The child,
Hanif, was trying to help fix a pump in his yard when the stray bullet struck
his temple. Now he was in intensive care at the nearby Mirwais Regional
Hospital, blind and crying out in pain. He was just one in a flood of people,
young and old, who had come through its doors in recent weeks because of
indiscriminate fire. On average, the war meant each day saw roughly five dead
and 15 wounded pass through the hospital’s doors.
Hanif’s
older brother, named Mohammed, sat beside him, trying to calm the flailing boy
as he explained that his wounded sibling’s condition was not improving.
The
doctors, Mohammed said, recommend that his brother go to Pakistan for
treatment, an impossibility as they had little money. Their father’s car
business had collapsed following the Taliban’s assault on the city, and they
could no longer return to their home because it was too dangerous.
Hanif
clawed at what he could not see and rolled over in the bed, crying out, his
head wrapped in bandages: “I want to go home,” he repeated over and over.
His screams
echoed down the hallway.
Taimoor
Shah and Baryalai Rahimi contributed reporting.
Fahim Abed
is a reporter in the Kabul, Afghanistan, bureau. @fahimabed
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