At least 540 Taliban militants, including 106 commanders, have escaped from Kandahar central prison in southern Afghanistan, an official says.According to Taliban spokesman Qari Yusuf Ahmadi, 541 Taliban prisoners managed to escape from Kandahar prison early Monday. He said 106 of them are key Taliban commanders, a Press TV correspondent reported.
“Prisoners dug a 360-metre-long tunnel to the south of the prison,” Ahmadi pointed out.
“They started getting out of the prison at 11:00 p.m. (1830 GMT) last night and by early morning today, 541 prisoners escaped the prison,” he added.
“They all have made it safe to our centers and there was no fighting,” he went on to say.
The Taliban militants’ escape was also confirmed by the prison director, General Ghulam Dastageer Mayar.
The Kandahar provincial governor’s office said in a statement that “a number” of the prisoners had since been recaptured without giving exact figures. A search was under way for the rest of the escapees, the statement added.
Local governmental officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that they have managed to capture only eight of the Taliban escapees.
Taliban claim that the move was pre-planned and that Taliban vehicles had been waiting for the prisoners at the end of the tunnel somewhere outside the prison.
In 2008, about 1,000 prisoners, including Taliban militants, managed to escape from Kandahar prison after the Taliban used a truck bomb to blow open the gates.
Over 150,000 US-led forces are currently stationed in war-torn Afghanistan, 30,000 of whom are deployed in the southern Taliban heartlands of Helmand and Kandahar provinces.
Four US-led troops killed in Afghan war
Separate explosions and violent incidents have killed four US-led troops in Afghanistan as the Taliban step up attacks against foreign forces in the country.
NATO says two soldiers were killed in a bomb attack in the country’s volatile south.
The Western military alliance has not revealed their nationalities.
Separately, a NATO pilot was killed when his helicopter crashed in the eastern Kapisa Province. The fourth soldier was also killed in the east.
The security situation remains fragile in Afghanistan despite the presence of 150,000 US-led foreign forces in the country.
According to official figures, more than 2,416 US-led soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan so far.
NATO’s rising casualties have stoked opposition to the war in countries contributing troops to the Afghan mission.
Taliban say US chopper shot down
The Taliban militants have claimed responsibility for downing a NATO helicopter in Kapisa province — some 65 kilometers north of the capital, Kabul.
NATO has confirmed one of its helicopters went down in Alah Say district in the country’s east, a Press TV correspondent reported.
The coalition forces have reportedly recovered both crew members.
No further details are available. At least 136 US-led foreign soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan since the start of 2011.
The Taliban claim that their militants have shot down several aircraft and NATO choppers in different parts of Afghanistan over the past few months.
Source: Press TV