Taliban insurgents beheaded 17 civilians, including two women, who were holding a party with music in a southern Afghanistan village, officials said yesterday.

This callous act demonstrates the insurgents’ willingness to stop at nothing

The atrocity drew immediate condemnation from the commander of Nato’s military force in Afghanistan, the UN, the US and Britain.

“I can confirm that this is the work of the Taliban,” the Helmand provincial governor’s spokesman Daud Ahmadi said, referring to Islamists notorious during their rule for public executions and the suppression of music and parties.

“Two women and 15 men were beheaded. They were partying with music in an area under the control of the Taliban,” he said.

Nematullah Khan, the Musa Qala district chief, confirmed that the villagers had organised a party with music, and one local official said he suspected that the two women had been dancing. Secret parties with dancing women from a gypsy-type tribe are common across southern Afghanistan.

During their 1996-2001 rule in Afghanistan the Taliban, now waging a fierce insurgency against the Nato-backed government of President Hamid Karzai, also tried to stop the mixing of men and women who were not related.

“This callous act clearly demonstrates the insurgents’ willingness to stop at nothing in terrorising civilians,” said General John Allen, commander of Nato’s International Security Assistance Force.

He pledged the assistance of Nato troops“to help bring these criminals to swift and sure justice”, while the US embassy in Kabul condemned the killings as “a shameful act”.

The atrocity happened near Zamindawar village, an area on the border between Kajaki and Musa Qala districts where the Taliban are active. The insurgents have in the past been blamed for beheading local villagers, mostly over charges of spying for Afghan and US-led Nato forces.

Haji Musa Khan, a tribal elder in Musa Qala district, said the region had seen a surge in such killings in recent months.

“We had three people beheaded during the month of Ramadan. Another person, the son of a tribal elder, was beheaded recently,” he said.

Haji Khan said the killings followed major military operations by Afghan and Nato troops in the area.

Hours after the beheadings, Taliban insurgents overran an Afghan army post in the same province in a pre-dawn attack yesterday, killing 10 troopers, authorities said.

Provincial spokesman Ahmadi said the attack was an “insider plot” in which some army soldiers helped the rebels attack the post. If it is confirmed that the attack was facilitated by soldiers it will mark a new escalation in a string of insider attacks on Afghan and Nato security forces.

Two Nato soldiers were killed yesterday when an Afghan army soldier turned his weapon against them in a “green-on-blue” attack in eastern Laghman province, the US-led International Security Assistance Force said.

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