Published: 12:01, August 31, 2022 | Updated: 12:09, August 31, 2022
Taliban set off fireworks, mark 1 year of US pullout from Afghanistan
By Reuters

Taliban fighters set off fireworks in the skies of Kabul as they celebrate the first anniversary of US troops withdrawal from Afghanistan, near the former US embassy in Kabul on Aug 30, 2022 (WAKIL KOHSAR / AFP)

KABUL - Celebratory fireworks lit up the Kabul sky on Tuesday night on the first anniversary of the withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan, which the Taliban are marking as "Freedom Day".

Fireworks with various and beautiful colors are going to be held to mark Freedom Day.

Zabihullah Mujahid, Taliban spokesman

The withdrawal, completed a minute before midnight local time on Aug 30, came as the country was taken over by the Taliban, who had waged a 20-year insurgency against US-led forces that invaded Afghanistan in October 2001 following the Sept 11 attacks in New York. 

"Fireworks with various and beautiful colors are going to be held to mark Freedom Day," Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid had said earlier on Tuesday.

The fireworks were accompanied by intense celebratory aerial firing in many areas of Kabul.

The Taliban government has also declared Wednesday a public holiday to mark the day, the labor ministry said.

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The United States completed its military withdrawal from Afghanistan after a huge but chaotic airlift that cost the lives of 13 US service members and left behind thousands of Afghans and hundreds of Americans

The head of the US Central Command had said back then that there was "a lot of heartbreak" associated with the departure. Having failed to anticipate the Taliban would prevail so quickly, Washington and its NATO allies were forced into a hasty exit.

The United States completed its military withdrawal from Afghanistan after a huge but chaotic airlift that cost the lives of 13 US service members and left behind thousands of Afghans and hundreds of Americans.

Some have since been able to leave, but many others remain in Afghanistan, where the Taliban are looking to establish a fully-functional government that is recognized by the international community.

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The Taliban also are now dealing with an insurgency of their own, led by the Afghanistan affiliate of the Islamic State militant group.