Battleground Kunduz: The city the Taliban seized

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Smoke rises from a police station during clashes between Taliban fighters and Afghan security forces, in Kunduz city 28 September 2015Image source, AP
Image caption,

Smoke at a police station in Kunduz. The province has seen a number of attacks since April

The brief militant seizure of Kunduz in 2015 was one of the Afghan government's worst setbacks since Taliban forces were ousted in 2001.

One of Afghanistan's largest cities, it has long been a strategically important transport hub for the north of the country.

Kunduz is linked by highways to Kabul in the south, with Mazar-e-Sharif in the west and with Tajikistan in the north.

But it has always held symbolic significance for the Taliban because it was a key northern stronghold before 2001.

'Drug smuggling route'

Kunduz is considered a gateway to Afghanistan's northern provinces and shares a border with Tajikistan, Afghanistan's Central Asian neighbour.

The border with Tajikistan is porous, and it is used for the smuggling of Afghan opium and heroin to Central Asia, which finally finds its way to Europe.

Any side controlling Kunduz would not only influence the surrounding areas, but could also control one of the most important drug smuggling routes in the region.

Security for the region - which was a flagship project for the German army - was transferred to Afghan forces in 2013.

But Kunduz has many other problems: bad governance as well as incompetence and intimidation by some local officials have alienated many in the province.

It has long been at the frontline of a determined campaign by the Taliban to reclaim it. In May last year the BBC's David Loyn reported from there as fighting between government forces and the Taliban unfolded.

The Taliban already control huge chunks of the province's rural areas, where the majority of the population lives. The insurgents have intensified their fighting in the province over the past two years.

A BBC reporter visited the city after it was back in government hands following its September 2015 capture. He found shock, a jail emptied of prisoners and many residents fearful of a Taliban return.

The battle for the city saw one of the worst incidents in the recent Afghan war when a Medecins sans Frontieres hospital was hit by a US air strike.

The city is estimated to have about 300,000 residents, external but those numbers are likely to be fluid because fighting has prompted many to flee the city.

Tens of thousands of people were displaced, living in shelters, spread across large tracts of countryside.

Although the insurgents were pushed back, they always had numbers in the region and many observers believed it was only a matter of time before a determined assault was attempted.

BBC Afghan's Dawood Azami and Inayatulhaq Yasini contributed to this report.