India has asked its nationals to leave Afghanistan today on a "special flight" from Mazar-i-Sharif - the country's fourth largest city - amid intense fighting with the Taliban.
"A special flight is leaving from Mazar-e-Sharif to New Delhi. Any Indian nationals in and around Mazar-e-Sharif are requested to leave for India in the special flight scheduled to depart late today evening," the Indian consulate in Mazar-e-Sharif tweeted.
Sources told NDTV that the Indians working in the Mazar-i-Sharif Consulate will be leaving in this flight too. With this there will be no Indians in any of the four consulates in Mazar, Kandahar, Jalalabad and Herat.
It asked Indian citizens who want to leave by the special flight to submit the details like their full name and passport number to the consulate immediately. Around 1,500 Indians are currently staying in Afghanistan, according to government data.
Last month India pulled out around 50 diplomats and security personnel from its consulate in Kandahar following intense clashes between Afghan forces and Taliban fighters around the city.
The embassy later put out a security advisory for India nationals visiting, staying and working in Afghanistan to keep themselves updated on the availability of commercial flights and make immediate arrangements to return to India before the flight services are impacted in the area they are staying at. The advisory also asked Indian mediapersons in the country to get in touch with the embassy for specific advice on locations they are travelling to.
The Taliban said Monday they had turned their sights on Mazar-i-Sharif.
A spokesperson of the insurgents announced on social media that they had launched a four-pronged attack on the city. They have already captured Sheberghan to its west and Kunduz and Taloqan in the east.
New Delhi has been supporting a national peace and reconciliation process that is Afghan-led, Afghan-owned and Afghan-controlled.
Mazar-i-Sharif is the largest city in the north and considered a linchpin to the government's control over the area.
Afghanistan's long-running conflict has escalated dramatically since May, when the US-led military coalition began the pullout of its forces - the exercise is set to be completed before the end of the month.
As the Taliban have taken control of several districts across the country, US intelligence assessments have suggested the country's civilian government could fall to the terror group within months of US forces withdrawing.
(With agency inputs)
Mumbai Indians' Rs 4.8 Crore Buy Stars As Afghanistan Clinch ODI Series vs Zimbabwe Zimbabwe vs Afghanistan 3rd ODI Highlights: Afghanistan Win By 8 Wickets, Clinch Series 2-0 Afghanistan Pacer Fazalhaq Farooqi Fined For Showing Dissent At Umpire's Decision Is Safe Car Enough? Volvo Crash That Killed CEO, Family Sparks Big Question "Nothing Short Of Nightmare": Woman Misses Life Event, Slams Air India Snack Food Epigamia Founder Rohan Mirchandani Dies Of Cardiac Arrest At 41 Key Challenges Gen Z Students Face Abroad And How to Overcome Them Penguin Waits Patiently As Couple Clears Path In Antarctica, Video Is Viral Now, Tea For Rs 10 At Kolkata Airport, Raghav Chadha Says "Change Brewing" Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.