Indian photojournalist Danish Siddiqui killed in Afghanistan clashes

India chief photographer Danish Siddiqui was killed while reporting about clashes in Afghanistan’s Kandahar city on Thursday night, Afghanistan’s Ambassador to India Farid Mamundzay said on Twitter. Clashes between the Taliban and the government has intensified as the United States-led international forces have been withdrawing from the country.

The Taliban have captured several districts and border crossings in the north and west. The Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist was covering the situation in Spin Boldak district when the incident took place, TOLOnews reported. In a series of tweets on July 13, the Indian photojournalist had described his travel with Afghan Special Forces on its missions.

He said that the objective of the mission was to extract a wounded police officer, who was trapped by the Taliban on the outskirts of Kandahar city. The area, he pointed out, is contested between the Afghanistan government and the Taliban. As the forces reached the extraction point, Siddiqui tweeted, that the Taliban used rocket-propelled grenades against the convoy, resulting in the destruction of three Humvees.

One of the rockets hit the vehicle he was travelling in, but Siddiqui had said that he was safe. “Gunners atop the Humvees swivelled wildly, aiming fire at suspected Taliban fighters who were hard to see,” he wrote.

Siddiqui was a Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist and the chief of Reuters Pictures multimedia team in India. He has covered many important events in Asia, Middle East and Europe, including the Rohingya refugees crisis for which he received the Pulitzer along with two colleagues the Hong Kong protests and living conditions of asylum seekers in Switzerland.

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