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Former Pakistani Taliban deputy chief and key commander mysteriously murdered in Afghanistan

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By Secunder Kermani & Sami Yousafzai & Ishtiaq MehsudBBC News
Kabul Taliban: Spies, militants and a mysterious assassination
  • 07 February 2020
  • Asia

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Image captionTwo men killed in Afghanistan were senior Pakistani Taliban

The fatal shooting of two men in the heart of the Afghan capital Kabul - a city unfortunately used to violence - went almost unnoticed.

But then, the dead men had hoped to go unnoticed: according to one source, they were both carrying fake IDs.

Exactly what they were doing in Kabul, and who killed them, remains a mystery that touches upon the murky links between security services and extremist groups in the region.

Who they really were, at least, has become clear. According to sources in Pakistani intelligence and militant circles, the men were senior members of the Pakistani Taliban - a group that has killed hundreds of Pakistanis in suicide bombings and other attacks.

One of the dead men was Sheikh Khalid Haqqani, who held a key position in the Pakistani Taliban's leadership council, and formerly served as the group's deputy leader.

He had been accused of involvement in several high-profile attacks on Pakistani politicians and linked to one of the country's deadliest militant attacks, the 2014 assault on a school in Peshawar , which left more than 150 people - mainly children - dead.

The second man was Qari Saif Younis, a military commander within the group. In a statement on Thursday, the Pakistani Taliban confirmed the men's identities and their deaths but gave few other details.

According to one militant source, the men had been due to hold a secret "meeting" in Kabul, on the direct orders of the group's leadership, apparently travelling from the eastern Afghan province of Paktika.

Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionTheir bodies were found near the Intercontinental Hotel in Kabul
The militant would not say who they were meeting. According to a source in Pakistani intelligence, the men's bodies were discovered in the vicinity of the high-end Intercontinental Hotel - the site of two deadly attacks in recent years.


The deaths occurred last week, but the source in the Pakistani Taliban said the group's leadership had initially ordered the news to be kept "secret", partly as they were rattled by the assassinations, and partly to avoid awkward questions about why the men were in the city.

It is highly unusual for senior members of the Pakistani Taliban to be travelling to Kabul. The group is an entirely separate entity from the Afghan Taliban, with different aims and different supporters. The Afghan Taliban have been fighting a long-running insurgency against the Afghan government, which is backed by US-led forces, while the Pakistani Taliban have focused their attacks inside Pakistan.

Pakistan has long been accused of sponsoring the Afghan Taliban, and providing them sanctuary within the country. It's alleged Afghan intelligence services developed links with the Pakistani Taliban in response.

The group, which has been severely weakened in recent years, is now based in the east of Afghanistan, in areas out of the control of the country's government.

Both countries deny supporting militant groups.

The statement from the Pakistani Taliban said the men were killed in a clash with American forces. The US has been holding discussions with the Afghan Taliban, aimed at bringing an end to the 18-year insurgency. Pakistan is believed to be key in helping persuade the group to reach a negotiated settlement.

The source within the group acknowledged it was also possible that gunmen or militants linked to Pakistani intelligence services were responsible.

They have in the past conducted other audacious assassinations, targeting figures wanted by Pakistan who were living in Afghanistan. For example, in December 2018 a suicide bombing in an upmarket district of the southern city of Kandahar killed a separatist Pakistani leader who had been living there in exile.

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Map
Conversely, figures linked to the Afghan Taliban have previously been killed in Pakistan. In 2013, one alleged senior Afghan militant figure was shot dead in a bakery in Islamabad .


According to sources within the Pakistani Taliban, the bodies of the men killed in Kabul, Sheikh Khalid Haqqani and Qari Saif Younis, were handed over to the group, and a large funeral was held for them on Monday in their stronghold in eastern Kunar Province.

Of course, how the bodies ended up back in the hands of their militant group remains another part of the intrigue.

https://www.bbc.com/news/amp/world-asia-51356940?__twitter_impression=true
 
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Bat to theek ha but where is ehsan ullah ehsan??
 
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Bat to theek ha but where is ehsan ullah ehsan??

Wait for 16yos to tell the ultimate hikmat and strategy of GHQ behind releasing or letting him escape (if its true).

Just like that dumb maliha lodhi caused shame and damage to kashmir case by waiving a Palestinian kid's picture in UN. How dumb can one be?
 
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Wait for 16yos to tell the ultimate hikmat and strategy of GHQ behind releasing or letting him escape (if its true).

Just like that dumb maliha lodhi caused shame and damage to kashmir case by waiving a Palestinian kid's picture in UN. How dumb can one be?
We have released many taliban leaders in the past but now why they kept this confidential??
 
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Former Pakistani Taliban deputy chief Sheikh Khalid Haqqani and key commander Qari Saif Younis mysteriously murdered in Afghanistan

The recent death of two people in the central area of Afghanistan's capital Kabul was a news that has not received much attention.

The victims also probably wanted to hide their identities. According to sources, the identity papers they had were fake.

What they were doing in Kabul and who killed them is still a mystery, whose fabric is linked to the coexistence of security forces and extremist groups in the region.

It was now clear who the two men were. According to sources from Pakistani intelligence agencies and extremist groups, the two men were senior leaders of the Pakistani Taliban.

One person killed is Sheikh Khalid Haqqani.

Sheikh Khalid Haqqani was a prominent figure in the leadership of the Pakistani Taliban and had previously served as the deputy head of the group.

He is accused of being involved in attacks on prominent politicians in Pakistan and the attack on Army Public School in Peshawar in 2014 that killed more than 150 people, most of them young children.

The other casualty killed is Saif Younis, a commander of the Pakistani Taliban.

A statement issued by the Pakistani Taliban last night confirmed the identity and death of both men, but the Taliban have provided little details.

According to a source from the militants, they were present for a "secret meeting" in Kabul on the orders of the Taliban's central leadership, and apparently came from the eastern province of Paktika, but it is unclear who they were going to meet.

According to a source in Pakistani intelligence agencies, the bodies of the men were found in the area near the Intercontinental Hotel. This is the hotel where two deadly attacks have taken place in recent years.

The killings took place last week, but sources in the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) say the leadership initially ordered the news to be hidden. According to sources, where the Taliban have been hit by these killings, they are not even ready to face the questions that these two men were doing in Kabul.

It is unusual for Pakistani Taliban leaders to travel to Kabul. This group is completely separate from the Afghan Taliban and their goals and supporters are not the same. Where the Afghan Taliban are leading a resistance movement against US-backed foreign-backed Afghan government in the country, Pakistani officials are the target of Pakistani Taliban operations and installations.

Pakistan has been facing accusations of backing the Afghan Taliban for a while, and it is also said that the Afghan government has since developed a relationship with the Pakistani Taliban.

The group, which has weakened in recent years, is now residing in the eastern part of Afghanistan, which is considered under government control.

Both Pakistan or Afghanistan deny the support of extremist groups.

A statement released by the Pakistani Taliban said the two men were killed during a clash with the US military.

The US is talking to the Afghan Taliban and its goal is to end the 18-year war in the country. Pakistan is said to have played a key role in bringing the Taliban to the negotiating table.

Sources in the militants have acknowledged that it is possible that armed men or militants linked to Pakistani intelligence agencies are responsible for the killings. There have been similar incidents in the past. In December 2018, a suicide bomber in Kandahar killed a Baloch militant leader living in exile in Afghanistan.

Similarly, people belonging to the Afghan Taliban have been killed in Pakistan. In 2013, a senior Afghan Taliban leader was killed in an oven near Islamabad.

According to Pakistani Taliban sources, the bodies of the two men killed in Kabul were handed over to the group and they were buried this week after a major funeral in Kantar.

The question of how these bodies are now returned to the Taliban has not been answered.

https://www.bbc.com/urdu/regional-51408831

 
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Releasing Ehsan will be like slapping on the face of APS victims and their families. Why all this drama they made for APS martyrs if they couldn't do it. Know one thing, these elites whether with uniforms in the GHQ or suits in the Parliament, will never be honest with the public. They've their own interest to take care of, not public interests.

By playing games like these, the Military is loosing its integrity in the eyes of the common man. It is literally like handing yourself to the enemy without a fight.
 
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Please do you think Ahsen was so innocent that he surrendered? No he was caught and to humiliate him they called it a surrender. Have you ever thought a moment where the intelligence came to a demolish Talibans? Wonder what role he played in providing intelligence. He may be calling his release in exchange as escape to make himself look tough and survive among Talibans ....

If I was a Taliban I would shoot him at first sight for betraying and naming other murderers ..
 
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Releasing Ehsan will be like slapping on the face of APS victims and their families. Why all this drama they made for APS martyrs if they couldn't do it. Know one thing, these elites whether with uniforms in the GHQ or suits in the Parliament, will never be honest with the public. They've their own interest to take care of, not public interests.

You have enjoyed freedom for 70 years from an enemy who is 7 times bigger than you and kills Muslims every day just to save cow. You think no one cares for you. Many give their lives daily to make sure you sleep comfortably please have some regard for them. Those who did Aps will go in coffins one by one.
 
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I love the way ISI is picking them off one by one. They deserve extreme torture then death but i guess getting killed on street like pig shit has to do for now.
 
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