Taliban city's last stand
COLIN WILLS in PeshawarUS BOMBERS yesterday launched a fresh blitz on Kandahar, the Taliban's last stronghold in Afghanistan.
Fighter planes battered targets inside the city around the clock.
At the same time, 6,000 refugees left Kandahar amid reports that law and order had broken down.
Thousands of US Marines massed at key entry points and helicopter units reinforced their nearby desert base, codenamed Camp Rhino. But a Taliban official inside the city vowed his troops would never surrender. He said: "We are in total control and we will never negotiate."
Meanwhile, up to 50 people died - some of them children - when a bombing raid hit a mountain village by mistake.
US warplanes swooped four times on tiny Kama Ado, 30 miles south of Jalalabad. A witness said 25 bombs were dropped, destroying all 30 mud, brick and wooden homes. Provincial defence chief Mohammed Zeman said: "We told the US authorities: 'Stop your bombing - it's not on the mark'."
The village is in the foothills of the White Mountains where Taliban are reportedly hiding out.
MORE than 80 Taliban fighters - many badly injured and starving - emerged yesterday from the ruins of a fort in Kunduz where hundreds more were killed in a three-day revolt last week.
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