CIVILIANS DRIVEN FROM GARMSIR BY FIGHTING
Helmand governor says major international operation is causing humanitarian crisis.
By Aziz Ahmad Tassal and Mohammad Ilyas Dayee in Helmand, Sefatullah Zahidi in Garmsir, and Abaceen Nasimi in Kabul
Much of the formerly bustling district of Garmsir in southern Helmand province now resembles a ghost town, with villages largely emptied of their populations.
An IWPR reporter visited one village, Loy Kalai, from which almost 4,000 families had fled. More than half the houses were destroyed, and abandoned farm animals were beginning to die.
The smell of decay hung over the area. In one house, a man who had died from shrapnel wounds lay unburied.
"I could not believe what I was seeing," a resident who witnessed the scene told IWPR. "It was a tragedy."
Garmsir district is the focus of a large-scale NATO operation codenamed "Azada Wosa" ("Be Free" in Pashto), launched on April 28 and led by a 2,400-strong United States Marine Expeditionary Unit which arrived in Afghanistan earlier this spring.
Supported by troops from NATO's International Security Assistance Force, ISAF, the Marines have spent the last month engaged in a fierce battle with the Taleban in southern Helmand province, attempting to drive the insurgents out of territory they have held these past two years.
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