Additional
Reporting By Husbanullah Mutawakel, IOL's Afghanistan Correspondent
KABUL,
Sept 10 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Rebel Afghan warlord Padsha
Khan claimed his forces had surrounded the southeastern city of Khost on
Tuesday after launching rocket attacks which officials said had killed
three civilians.
Khan
said he was intent on seizing control of the city from the official
governor of Khost province, Hakeem Taniwal, after his men were forced
out of the governor's office over the weekend during mediation talks
with the U.S. military.
"Now
they have been completely surrounded and Inshallah (God willing) in the
next few days you will be informed that we have taken control of Khost
again," Khan told AFP by phone.
Taniwal's
deputy, Mohammad Ibrahim Moshfiq, said "two women and one child
were martyred" when rockets landed in the center of the city. Two
children had been wounded, he said.
But
Moshfiq denied Khan was in a position to seize control of Khost.
Speaking
to Afghani Islamic News Agency on Monday, September 9 Khan said that
they are preparing for a wide range attack and that he is asking the
residents of the city to leave to avoid being killed. “This is our
land and we shall fight to get it back,” he said.
Eyewitnesses
told the agency that the two sides have been using heavy weaponry and
that the bodies of the injured and dead are lying around the streets of
the city and no one can come close to it because of the heavy fighting.
Stores and markets are closed and most of the residents of the city have
left their homes and went to nearby by farm areas and villages, they
added.
Afghani
sources said that Taniwal’s forces were able to take control of the
state’s headquarters, the customs and the municipality, which was all
under Khan’s control.
But
Khan, speaking to the Afghani Islamic News Agency, said that Taniwal’s
forces took advantage of the fact that he and some of his leaders were
away from the city and took over the headquarters and municipality but
that the customs building was still under his control.
"They
do not have a force to fight us. They just fire rockets from a jeep and
then they escape,” said Moshfiq adding that local forces "have
not asked for any help from the central government because we do not
need military help".
"We
have asked the Americans if they can fly two helicopters to hit them
from where they are shooting rockets. We have heavy rockets and if we
shoot them, houses will be damaged and people will be killed,"
Moshfiq added. "But they (the Americans) said they don't have any
helicopters available."
Moshfiq
told AFP later that there had been no fresh attacks on Tuesday.
"Right now it is quiet. Nothing is happening."
Khan,
leader of the powerful Zadran tribe, has for months been trying to seize
control of Khost and the neighboring province of Paktia after tribal
elders prevented him from taking power.
He
had told civilians to leave the city before his new onslaught but the
rocket attacks came just hours after his ultimatum.
His
followers had been occupying the official governor's residence in Khost
while Taniwal, who was appointed by President Hamid Karzai, has been
forced to base himself in a building on the other side of town.
Khan
has been a constant thorn in the side of Karzai, who has pledged to
loosen Afghan warlords' hold on the country. But Karzai has also been
reluctant to send in troops, saying he prefers negotiations.
Fighting
between supporters of Taniwal and Khan broke out at the weekend, leaving
eight people dead.
Khan
claims Taniwal's men attacked when a delegation headed by Khan traveled
to Gardez, the capital of Paktia, for discussions with U.S. army
representatives.
Asked
if he had given civilians enough time to leave the city, Khan said:
"We have to defend ourselves and we can decide whether we want to
attack at any time."
Khan,
who claims to have 6,000 followers, has been an ally of the U.S.-led
coalition which has been concentrating its hunt for remaining al-Qaeda
and Taliban fighters in southeast Afghanistan.
U.S.
spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Roger King said on Tuesday that forces were
keeping their distance.
"There
are troops on the ground trying to keep an eye on what's going on but at
the same time they are not getting involved unless they are challenged.
"The
Afghan government can handle its internal problems but the coalition
forces reserve their right to preserve their freedom of movement in the
battlefield and if that freedom of maneuver is threatened, we will take
action."