KABUL, Oct. 17 (Xinhua) -- British troops of ISAF
have pulled out of the insurgent Musa Qala district in the southern Helmand
province, an ISAF spokesman told Xinhua on Tuesday.
"After dialogue and discussion with local elders, we think they deserve an opportunity to resume their areas and
keep security themselves," said Maj. Luke Knittig, a spokesman for the
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF).
The elders were confident they could bring peace to
the district and defend it from the Taliban, so ISAF listened to them, said
Knittig, adding the troops would be deployed to places where soldiers are more
needed.
He declined to say how many troops were withdrawn
from the district citing security reasons.
However, local media reports said about 120 British
soldiers were pulled out of Musa Qala, where the troops had come under heavy
attacks from Taliban militants.
Meanwhile, Helmand Governor Mohammad Daud said there
was no deal between the troops, the government and the Taliban, according to
media reports.
He also refused a reported statement by the Taliban
that said the Afghan flag would not fly in the district any longer.
"The Afghan flag is there, our new district chief,
our new police chief and the police are there," Daud said.
Analysts say one factor for the withdrawal apparently
is the high casualties of the British troops in the district.
Nearly 30 British soldiers have been killed in
Helmand, where about 4,000 UK troops are deployed, and the neighboring Kandahar
province in the past two months, while about 10 of them lost their lives in Musa
Qala. Enditem