The group’s fighters attacked the city from various directions after midnight, killing many and wounding over 50 others.

At least six people have been killed and more than 50 wounded in Afghanistan‘s northern city of Kunduz in an assault by Taliban fighters, according to a local official.

Mohammad Yusouf Ayubi, the head of the provincial council in Kunduz, said the group’s forces attacked the city from multiple directions in the small hours on Saturday.

Hundreds of people fled their homes as the sound of gunfire and explosions echoed from the city’s outskirts, he was quoted as saying by the Associated Press news agency.

Naeem Mangal, the head of the Kunduz regional hospital, told the AFP news agency that at least eight people were killed and 62 wounded.

Also on Saturday, the Taliban claimed responsibility for an attack on a district headquarters in the eastern Nangarhar province late on Friday.

At least two Afghan troops were killed in the incident, along with 27 Taliban fighters, according to Attahullah Khogyani, the governor’s spokesman.

Nangarhar Governor Shahmahmood Miakhel said Afghan forces repelled the attack after reinforcements arrived.

The Taliban, which frequently exaggerates numbers, claimed to have killed or wounded “more than 200 soldiers, police and militias”.

Spring offensive

The assault came hours after the Taliban announced the start of Operation Fath, the name the group has given to this year’s spring offensive.

Also on Friday, the Taliban ambushed a police convoy in the western Ghor province, killing seven security forces, according to Abdul Hai Khateby, the provincial governor’s spokesman.

Among those killed was Faqir Ahmad Noori, the head of operations for the provincial police. Another two police and a civilian were wounded, Khateby said.

In the northern Baghlan province, the Taliban killed seven police and wounded eight in an attack on checkpoints late on Friday, said Safder Mohsini, the head of the provincial council.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani‘s office on Saturday condemned “in the strongest words” the announcement of Operation Fath.

“The continuation of war is no one’s interest,” it said.

Spring offensive

The spring offensive traditionally marks the start of the so-called fighting season, though in reality fighting in the last winter has continued unabated.

The Taliban effectively controls nearly half of Afghanistan and has continued to launch frequent attacks on security forces despite holding several rounds of peace talks with the United States in recent months after nearly 18 years of war.

Later this month, Taliban officials are expected to meet Afghanistan representatives, including some officials from the government in Kabul, in Qatar‘s capital Doha.

The Taliban has long refused to speak officially with Kabul, dubbing the government a “puppet” of the West, and the group has insisted that government officials are attending only in a “personal capacity”.

The United Nations last week said it had lifted travel bans for 11 Taliban delegates, including Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, a cofounder of the movement and its top political leader, as well as Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai, the Taliban’s former deputy minister of foreign affairs.

“The requested exemption is solely for travels required for participation in peace and reconciliation discussions,” the UN Security Council said.