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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Afghan official flees amid clash

Stephen Graham Associated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan – Fighters loyal to several regional warlords stormed a remote provincial capital and forced the governor to flee, one of the group’s leaders and a government official said Friday. At least 10 people were believed killed.

The violence presents a fresh security threat for President Hamid Karzai, whose authority is already sapped by factional fighting across a swath of northern and western Afghanistan as well as a spreading Taliban-led insurgency.

Clashes broke out late Thursday in Chagcharan, a small town that is the capital of western Ghor province, 220 miles west of the capital Kabul.

Din Mohammed Azimi, Ghor’s deputy governor, said the governor had fled for either Herat or Kabul on Thursday afternoon.

Azimi, who said he was speaking from a village a few miles to the north of the city, said at least 10 of his men were killed and that more than 1,500 fighters were preparing a counterattack.

Ghulam Yahya, a former Ghor police chief who is now one of the warlords opposed to the governor, said he knew of only one person killed, but it was not clear if he was referring only to casualties on his side.

The fighting follows weeks of tension between allies of the provincial military commander, Ahmad Murghabi, and rival tribes over positions in the local administration.

Azimi said a group of rival factions led by Rais Salam launched the attack after rejecting an offer of control of four government departments, including police and intelligence.

He said a delegation from the Kabul government led by Alam Rasekh, an adviser to Karzai, had left Chagcharan on Wednesday.

Once the fighting broke out, Azimi said he appealed in vain to Defense Minister Mohammed Fahim and other officials in Kabul.

“They promised to help but nothing came. The central government is very weak, it’s useless,” he complained, also calling for NATO and the U.S. military to send troops.

Government officials in Kabul were not immediately available.