Word: mazar
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...TIME.com: What's the latest from the battle for Mazar-i-Sharif...
...Alex Perry: We've learned from sources with two key Northern Alliance commanders, generals Rashid Dostum and Mohammed Atta, that contrary to expectations, Northern Alliance forces have moved unopposed through the Shol Ghar pass south of Mazar-i-Sharif. They now claim to be four miles south of the city, and are promising to capture it tomorrow (Thursday). The reason for their rapid advance, they say, is that the Taliban forces defending the city have abandoned Mazar, heading west to Herat and east to Kunduz...
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...impossible to verify these reports right now because no journalists are in the area at all - this part of the war is being reported entirely by phone. We're frantically trying to call sources inside Mazar-i-Sharif right now, but all the lines are jammed. Still, the sources who have fed us this information have proved fairly reliable in the past. Three Alliance commanders in the area have told identical stories. And it's a claim they're unlikely to make unless it were true. They are confident that they'll be in Mazar tomorrow...
...recent history of Mazar-i-Sharif is extremely bloody. When a Northern Alliance commander switched sides in 1997 and let the Taliban in, they immediately started ordering everyone around. The population turned on them, massacring between two- and four thousand Taliban troops. So when the Taliban recaptured the city the following year, they took a bloody revenge, killing some 6,000 civilians. Everyone had been expecting that once the Taliban were under siege and in trouble, the city would rise up against them, precipitating a bloodbath. With the appetite for revenge in Mazar-i-Sharif, nobody was expecting the Taliban...