The Taliban advance on Lashkar Gah has compounded fears that the city was on the brink of falling into insurgent hands, even as US and Afghan officials insist that they will not allow another urban centre to be captured.
Local officials warned on Tuesday that the provincial capital was struggling to cope with an influx of people fleeing the fighting across Helmand, seen as the focal point of the expanding insurgency.
"It difficult for the city to contain all of them. Families, children, women, all have to sleep on the streets. There is a shortage of food and clean water. We need urgent support."
The turmoil in Helmand, blighted by a huge opium harvest that helps fund the insurgency, underscores a rapidly unravelling security situation in Afghanistan.
The defence ministry on Monday confirmed that heavy fighting had flared in Nad Ali district, where government troops sought to dislodge insurgents who overran a neighbourhood only a few kilometres from Lashkar Gah.
Panicked Lashkar Gah residents voiced fears that the city could fall, saying insurgents had heavily mined the roads from neighbouring districts and exhausted soldiers were running out of food supplies.
"The Taliban are in control of all the roads leading to Lashkar Gah," resident Haji Qayum told AFP.
"The police checkposts are falling one by one. There is a great fear the capital may fall to the Taliban."
The Taliban briefly captured northern Kunduz city in September last year, the first city to fall to the insurgents in their biggest victory in 14 years of war.
The insurgents are flushing an elite new commando force into Helmand, which they call "Sara Khitta" -- the Red Brigade in Pashto.
"They are a highly-trained, well-armed unit with modern equipments including night vision goggles," a Taliban commander in Nad Ali district told AFP, without revealing their exact number.
An Afghan security official in Kabul confirmed the existence of the new Taliban unit in Helmand, but played down their impact on the battle field.
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