
The Taliban posted images on social media that showed insurgents inside the local airport, as well as posing for photographs at the entrance of the city.
According to report, all British citizens
in Afghanistan are being told to leave immediately as the country moves into
what the UN has described as a "deadlier and more destructive phase".
The Foreign, Commonwealth and
Development Office on Friday evening issued an advisory against all travel to
Afghanistan.
It added: "If you are still in
Afghanistan, you are advised to leave now by commercial means because of the
worsening security situation."
It comes after Taliban fighters
recaptured Zaranj in southern Nimroz, the first provincial capital to have
fallen to the extremist group since it briefly held Kunduz in the north in
2016.
Nimroz is a sparsely populated region
that is mostly desert, and the provincial capital has about 50,000 residents.
At least 1,000 civilians have been
killed in Afghanistan during the past month, and more than half of
Afghanistan's 421 districts and district centres are now in Taliban hands,
along with lucrative border crossings into Iran, Tajikistan and Pakistan.
At a special meeting of the UN Security
Council on Friday, Deborah Lyons, the UN envoy to Afghanistan, said the
fighting and resultant human toll were worsening.
"The war in Afghanistan has entered
a new, deadlier, and more destructive phase," she said.
"The provincial capitals of
Kandahar, Herat, and Lashkar Gah in particular have come under significant
pressure.
"This is a clear attempt by the
Taliban to seize urban centres with the force of arms."
She added: "The human toll of this
strategy is extremely distressing - and the political message is even more
deeply disturbing."
She said that 104 civilians were killed in just 10 days in Lashkar Gah, the capital city of Helmand province, as insurgents sweep across the country following the withdrawal of foreign troops earlier this year.
Also on Friday, Afghan government forces
joined US aircraft in attacking Taliban positions in Helmand, where the militant’s
control nine out of the 10 city districts.
Meanwhile, the Taliban assassinated Dawa
Khan Menapal, the chief of the Afghan government's press operations for local
and foreign media and previously a deputy spokesman for President Ashraf Ghani.
Mr Menapal was murdered while in his car
during Friday prayers in Kabul, the Afghan capital.
It comes days after an attempt to kill
the country's acting defence minister, Bismillah Khan Mohammadi, in a Taliban
bombing that left eight people dead and 20 wounded.
The minister was unharmed.
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