<p>Taliban fighters broke out into prayers as their banner fluttered from a flagpole in Panjshir on Monday, after the hardline Islamist group announced the capture of the last pocket of resistance to their rule.</p>.<p>In videos circulating on pro-Taliban social media, fighters passed underneath portraits venerating their old enemy, the late Panjshir resistance commander Ahmad Shah Massoud.</p>.<p>Three weeks after seizing Kabul, the Taliban claimed to have conquered the rugged valley on Monday -- a historic blow to the province.</p>.<p>Under Massoud, the Panjshir fighters earned a legendary reputation for resistance, defending their mountain homes first from the Soviet military for a decade, then throughout a civil war, then the last Taliban regime from 1996-2001.</p>.<p>"With this victory, our country is completely taken out of the quagmire of war," the Taliban's chief spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement.</p>.<p>Soon after, in a photograph released by Taliban official Bilal Karimi, the same picture of Massoud is seen with his face ripped out. Taliban gunmen then stand posing in front of the ragged portrait.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/taliban-claim-total-control-over-afghanistan-1027681.html" target="_blank">Taliban claim total control over Afghanistan</a></strong></p>.<p>The National Resistance Front (NRF) -- made up of anti-Taliban militia and former Afghan security forces -- have admitted to suffering heavy losses, and have called for a ceasefire.</p>.<p>On Sunday, the NRF said spokesman Fahim Dashty -- a well-known Afghan journalist -- and a top commander, General Abdul Wudod Zara, had been killed.</p>.<p>But they also said their fighters were still present in "strategic positions" across the valley, and that they were continuing the struggle.</p>.<p>The Taliban completed a stunning two-week offensive across Afghanistan on August 15, taking the capital, Kabul, without a fight.</p>.<p>Remnants of the Afghan army then retreated to the Panjshir Valley, north of Kabul, to create the NRF.</p>.<p>The 115-kilometre-long (70-mile-long) valley surrounded by jagged snow-capped peaks offers defenders a natural military advantage, allowing them to use the high positions to ambush attacking forces below.</p>.<p>But they faced internet shutdowns by the Taliban and supply roads were blocked.</p>.<p>Previously, Panjshir's fighters melted away in the face of advancing forces, hiding in canyons off the main valley, then launching guerilla raids.</p>.<p>But the Taliban have been emboldened by their sweeping victories across the rest of the country, where they seized an enormous arsenal of weapons and military kit that the now-departed US provided to the defeated Afghan army.</p>.<p>The NRF is led by Ahmad Massoud -- the son of Ahmad Shah Massoud -- as well as ex-officials who fled to the valley from the toppled government, including former vice-president Amrullah Saleh, a fierce Taliban critic.</p>.<p>It is unclear where those senior Panjshir leaders are now based.</p>.<p>But Massoud, in an audio message Monday after the Taliban declarations of victory, called for Afghans to "rise up".</p>.<p>The Panjshir -- mainly inhabited by ethnic Tajik people -- has immense symbolic value in Afghanistan as the area that has resisted occupation by invaders in the past.</p>.<p>The Taliban warned Monday that anyone who "tries to start an insurgency" against them "will be hit hard."</p>.<p>But Massoud's message in reply was one of fighting bravado.</p>.<p>"For those who want to take up arms, we are with you," he said in a call for resistance.</p>.<p>"For those who will resort to protest, we will stand next to you."</p>
<p>Taliban fighters broke out into prayers as their banner fluttered from a flagpole in Panjshir on Monday, after the hardline Islamist group announced the capture of the last pocket of resistance to their rule.</p>.<p>In videos circulating on pro-Taliban social media, fighters passed underneath portraits venerating their old enemy, the late Panjshir resistance commander Ahmad Shah Massoud.</p>.<p>Three weeks after seizing Kabul, the Taliban claimed to have conquered the rugged valley on Monday -- a historic blow to the province.</p>.<p>Under Massoud, the Panjshir fighters earned a legendary reputation for resistance, defending their mountain homes first from the Soviet military for a decade, then throughout a civil war, then the last Taliban regime from 1996-2001.</p>.<p>"With this victory, our country is completely taken out of the quagmire of war," the Taliban's chief spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement.</p>.<p>Soon after, in a photograph released by Taliban official Bilal Karimi, the same picture of Massoud is seen with his face ripped out. Taliban gunmen then stand posing in front of the ragged portrait.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/taliban-claim-total-control-over-afghanistan-1027681.html" target="_blank">Taliban claim total control over Afghanistan</a></strong></p>.<p>The National Resistance Front (NRF) -- made up of anti-Taliban militia and former Afghan security forces -- have admitted to suffering heavy losses, and have called for a ceasefire.</p>.<p>On Sunday, the NRF said spokesman Fahim Dashty -- a well-known Afghan journalist -- and a top commander, General Abdul Wudod Zara, had been killed.</p>.<p>But they also said their fighters were still present in "strategic positions" across the valley, and that they were continuing the struggle.</p>.<p>The Taliban completed a stunning two-week offensive across Afghanistan on August 15, taking the capital, Kabul, without a fight.</p>.<p>Remnants of the Afghan army then retreated to the Panjshir Valley, north of Kabul, to create the NRF.</p>.<p>The 115-kilometre-long (70-mile-long) valley surrounded by jagged snow-capped peaks offers defenders a natural military advantage, allowing them to use the high positions to ambush attacking forces below.</p>.<p>But they faced internet shutdowns by the Taliban and supply roads were blocked.</p>.<p>Previously, Panjshir's fighters melted away in the face of advancing forces, hiding in canyons off the main valley, then launching guerilla raids.</p>.<p>But the Taliban have been emboldened by their sweeping victories across the rest of the country, where they seized an enormous arsenal of weapons and military kit that the now-departed US provided to the defeated Afghan army.</p>.<p>The NRF is led by Ahmad Massoud -- the son of Ahmad Shah Massoud -- as well as ex-officials who fled to the valley from the toppled government, including former vice-president Amrullah Saleh, a fierce Taliban critic.</p>.<p>It is unclear where those senior Panjshir leaders are now based.</p>.<p>But Massoud, in an audio message Monday after the Taliban declarations of victory, called for Afghans to "rise up".</p>.<p>The Panjshir -- mainly inhabited by ethnic Tajik people -- has immense symbolic value in Afghanistan as the area that has resisted occupation by invaders in the past.</p>.<p>The Taliban warned Monday that anyone who "tries to start an insurgency" against them "will be hit hard."</p>.<p>But Massoud's message in reply was one of fighting bravado.</p>.<p>"For those who want to take up arms, we are with you," he said in a call for resistance.</p>.<p>"For those who will resort to protest, we will stand next to you."</p>