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IS militants in Afghanistan flee to Kunar province REUTERS in Dawn, March 25th, 2016

KUNAR: Dozens of fighters loyal to the militant Islamic State (IS) group in Afghanistan have relocated into the eastern province of Kunar following an intense campaign by US warplanes and Afghan forces, officials said on Thursday.

Local IS leader Hafiz Saeed was believed to be among those who fled to Kunar from neighbouring Nangarhar province, Kunar’s police chief and an army spokesman said.

A relatively new force in Afghanistan, IS has violently challenged the much larger Afghan Taliban movement in pockets of the country’s east.

In the past few months, however, stepped-up US air strikes and a campaign by Afghan government forces have driven some from their main territory in Nangarhar, officials said.

“IS faced very heavy casualties in Nangarhar, so they have changed their battleground and come to Kunar,” police chief Abdul Habib Sayedkhil said.

He said intelligence indicated that Hafiz Saeed and several dozen fighters had relocated to Kunar’s Serkany district, next to the Pakistan border.

“Kunar is a mountainous and forested province, and can be a very good hideout for fighters,” Sayedkhil said.

Shereen Aqa, a spokesman for the Afghan National Army’s 201 Corps, also said Saeed and his fighters had relocated from their main territory in Achin district of Nangarhar into Kunar.

The group numbers some 1,000 to 3,000 members in Afghanistan, a US military spokesman said in February.

US President Barack Obama granted the Ameri­can military the authority to conduct air strikes against IS in January.

Fighters joining IS are typically former members of the Afghan Taliban or the separate Pakistani Taliban.

Adding IS into Afgha­nistan’s mix of Islamist militants could further destabilise Afghanistan just as the US has been seeking to withdraw more troops after handing most fighting over to Afghan government forces.

The Nato-led coalition in Afghanistan declared its combat mission over at the end of 2014, 13 years after sponsoring a military intervention to topple the Taliban’s former government.

Roughly 9,800 US troops, mostly military trainers and advisers, remain in Afghanistan. With violence near the worst since 2001, Obama is under increasing pressure to revise plans to cut that number to 5,500 by the end of this year. http://www.dawn.com/news/1247782/is-militants-in-afghanistan-flee-to-kunar-province

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