Jalalabad: Air strikes have destroyed a radio station run by Daesh militants in eastern Afghanistan, officials said on Wednesday, two months after the group took to the airwaves in a sign of their growing reach.

The Pashto-language “Voice of the Caliphate” beamed Daesh propaganda in irregular nightly broadcasts from an undisclosed location in Nangarhar province bordering Pakistan.

The Afghan defence ministry said the programme was broadcast from a moving vehicle and air strikes on Monday destroyed the transmission equipment hidden in the basement of a house in volatile Achin district.

“The radio programme has not been heard since Tuesday,” Achin district governor Haji Ghalib said.

“It was very demoralising for our troops and it is welcome news that it has been destroyed.”

The group, which controls territory across Syria and Iraq, has made alarming inroads in Nangarhar, as the country grapples with a resurgent Taliban insurgency.

In recent months Afghan forces backed by US drones launched a scorched earth offensive to beat back Daesh in Nangarhar, where the group’s rein of terror has displaced thousands of people.

The defence ministry said Monday’s strikes were carried out by the Afghan air force with the support of Nato troops.

But some media reports said US forces conducted the strikes.

The Nato mission in Afghanistan said two American “counter-terrorism strikes” were carried out late Monday in Achin, without elaborating.

Mumtaz Sadat, a 28-year-old former Afghan soldier in Nangarhar, said the radio, which aired bombastic antigovernment propaganda, sowed fear among local residents.

“It was psychological warfare,” he said.

President Ashraf Ghani recently vowed to “bury” the group’s affiliate in Afghanistan, while voicing alarm over their growing reach.