KABUL: A senior Taliban military commander has been killed in a US airstrike in Afghanistan, officials said on Sunday.
Abdul Manan, who was the Taliban’s ‘shadow governor’ in the southern Helmand province, died of wounds sustained during an airstrike late on Saturday said Omar Zwak, a spokesman for the official governor of the province.
Manan’s death was also confirmed by the Taliban who in a statement described it as a “big loss” for the group but vowed that it will not affect their military operations.
Helmand — the region that supplies the largest share of Afghanistan’s opium crop — has been the scene of bitter fighting for years with 10 out of 14 districts of the province either controlled or contested by the Taliban.
As a senior Taliban leader, Abdul Manan had led the insurgency group’s expansion as it expanded control over the opium-rich province in recent years.
Afghan interior ministry spokesman Najib Danish said Manan was the militants’ top military leader in southern Afghanistan and his death is a major blow to the Taliban.
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“His death will lower the moral of the enemy, and result in (the) improvement of security in Helmand and other southern provinces,” Najib Danish told AFP.
Danish said that 32 other Taliban fighters were also killed in the airstrike.
A US force spokesman in Afghanistan confirmed the airstrike had killed the Taliban shadow governor.