The Taliban have killed 28 paramilitary policemen in fighting in southern Afghanistan, officials said Wednesday, the latest losses in an ongoing siege of a government-controlled district that could tip into insurgent hands.
One local official said the Taliban executed the police after they had surrendered, but the insurgents denied this and AFP was not immediately able to confirm the claim.
If proven, a mass shooting of dozens of captives would mark a grim new low point in Afghanistan's recent violence, which has been worsening in recent weeks.
The incident occurred in the Gizab district of the southern province of Uruzgan, where intense fighting has raged for days as the Taliban besiege outmanned and outgunned Afghan police and army outposts.
Zelgai Ebadi, a spokesman for the Uruzgan governor, said Taliban fighters offered 28 local and national police a chance to go home if they surrendered Tuesday night.
"But after taking their guns, the Taliban killed them all," Ebadi said.
Provincial council head Amir Mohammad Barekzai confirmed the deaths and said heavy fighting was ongoing.
Barekzai would not say if the men had been killed before or after surrendering.
A third local official, speaking on condition of anonymity, put the deaths at 28-30 police, adding that three policemen managed to escape.
The interior ministry declined to comment on the circumstances of the deaths.
In a statement, the Taliban denied it had slaughtered the policemen after they surrendered.
"Enemy claims that they were executed after surrender are baseless. Mujahidin (Taliban fighters) repeatedly asked them to lay down arms & end hostility, but they insisted on fighting," Taliban spokesman Yusuf Ahmadi said on Twitter.
The 28 deaths come after at least 14 Afghan police and soldiers were killed during the same battle overnight Sunday-Monday.
Taliban and Afghan government negotiators are meeting in Doha, where they are trying to find a way to end 19 years of war.
A hopeful start to the peace talks September 12 was immediately marred by fresh violence across Afghanistan.
Negotiations are moving slowly, with the two sides trying to thrash out various parameters before deciding an agenda.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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