KABUL, Afghanistan -- Taliban fighters overran a second district headquarters in as many days Sunday, this one in western Ghor province, the provincial police chief said.
At least eight police were killed in battles against Taliban militants, who have stepped up their attacks in the north and west of the country, laying siege to district headquarters, said Mohammad Mustafa Moseni.
Moseni said the Taliban launched four assaults on Ghor's Taywara district headquarters early Sunday, and "we had no choice but to retreat."
He said police have taken up positions about 5 miles from the district headquarters as they wait for reinforcements to launch a counterattack.
After capturing the Taywara district, Taliban fighters stalked the corridors of the only hospital, looking for wounded Afghan National Security personnel to kill, provincial public health department director Ghulam Nabi Yaghana said.
He said he received reports they killed four or five patients.
The area is remote, and telephone communication is sporadic, he told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from the provincial capital of Ferozkoh. He said Taliban entered the 20-bed hospital early Sunday. It's believed all the dead are military or police personnel, he said.
The Taliban, in a statement to the media, announced the capture of Taywara district headquarters. The statement said 46 Afghan government security forces were killed. The AP could not independently verify either death toll.
In northern Faryab province's Lawlash district, two police were killed late Saturday when Taliban used the cover of darkness to attack the district headquarters, setting fire to the police headquarters buildings, Abdul Karim Yourish, provincial police chief spokesman, said Sunday.
Government offices and the police headquarters were inside the compound, he said.
In recent days, Taliban have launched dozens of attacks in northern Afghanistan, temporarily closing a key highway between the capital Kabul and northern Afghanistan. The attacks reflect the Taliban's efforts to apply pressure on government troops and police across the country.
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