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Hekmatyar support for IS stuns observers

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Enemy of enemy: Hekmatyar support for IS stuns observers
Published: July 7, 2015

ISLAMABAD:
In a startling move, Hizb-e-Islami chief Gulbuddin Hekmatyar has advised his supporters to help the Islamic State (IS) or Dai’sh in its fight against the Taliban.


Hekmatyar’s controversial remarks came amid reports of fighting between the Taliban and IS in parts of Nangarhar province.

Nearly 80 people, including some known personalities, from both sides have been killed since May 10, senior Afghan Taliban leader Anwarul Haq Mujahid said last week.

Last month, the Taliban issued a warning to Dai’sh leader Abu Bakar Baghdadi asking him to stay out of Afghanistan.

Senior Afghan officials are showing concerns at the looming IS threat and the government of President Ashraf Ghani has raised a special force to fight the group.

“If the Taliban of the Emirate fight with those who have quit the Taliban and declared allegiance to the Islamic State, help these militants, because the Taliban are sworn enemies of Hizb-e-Islami,” Hekamtayr advised his supporters in a statement posted on the Hizb’s daily ‘Shahadat’.

The Hizb-e-Islami itself had been involved in fighting with the Taliban fighters on several occasions and in parts of Maida-e-Wardak province.

Hekmatyar had also kept an option open for his supporters, asking them to stand with the Taliban if they are involved in fighting with the Communists and remnants of Shoora-e-Nazar, a group once led by Ahmad Shah Masood, who was killed by al-Qaeda in September 2001.

The Hizb chief said he has announced this strategy as the enemy had created the Communists, Shoora-e-Nazar and the Taliban against Hizb-e-Islami who do not hesitate to commit crimes against it.

“As these groups are creating new problems in the country so it is suitable time for Hizb-e-Islami to adopt a new approach towards them,” said the former prime minister.

Hekmatyar’s remarks plunged the Hizb-e-Islami into a crisis as its leaders were surprised to see what some described as a statement in favour of Dai’sh.

The Express Tribune has learnt that the Hizb central council is likely to meet soon to explore ways to respond to criticism at Hekmatyar’s remarks.

In a separate statement, Hekmatyar has condemned Iran as “a country against Islam” and said the Islamic Republic was “another Israel for the Islamic countries.”

Hekmatyar accused Iran of “fomenting sectarian hatred between Shias and Sunnis in Pakistan.”

Blasts in Sunni mosques during prayers and the killing of Sunni leaders is the handiwork of Iranian Pasdaran-e-Inqilab (Revolutionary Guards),” he alleged. He mentioned the killing of former NWFP governor Fazale Haq.

“Iran’s politics is based on lies. Iran has always stood with the enemy and stabbed the Muslim Ummah at the back,” the Hizb chief said.

Published in The Express Tribune, July 7th, 2015.
 
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Hekmatyar’s controversial remarks came amid reports of fighting between the Taliban and IS in parts of Nangarhar province.

Nearly 80 people, including some known personalities, from both sides have been killed since May 10, senior Afghan Taliban leader Anwarul Haq Mujahid said last week.

Last month, the Taliban issued a warning to Dai’sh leader Abu Bakar Baghdadi asking him to stay out of Afghanistan.

Senior Afghan officials are showing concerns at the looming IS threat and the government of President Ashraf Ghani has raised a special force to fight the group.

“If the Taliban of the Emirate fight with those who have quit the Taliban and declared allegiance to the Islamic State, help these militants, because the Taliban are sworn enemies of Hizb-e-Islami,” Hekamtayr advised his supporters in a statement posted on the Hizb’s daily ‘Shahadat’.

The Hizb-e-Islami itself had been involved in fighting with the Taliban fighters on several occasions and in parts of Maida-e-Wardak province.

Hekmatyar had also kept an option open for his supporters, asking them to stand with the Taliban if they are involved in fighting with the Communists and remnants of Shoora-e-Nazar, a group once led by Ahmad Shah Masood, who was killed by al-Qaeda in September 2001.

The Hizb chief said he has announced this strategy as the enemy had created the Communists, Shoora-e-Nazar and the Taliban against Hizb-e-Islami who do not hesitate to commit crimes against it.

“As these groups are creating new problems in the country so it is suitable time for Hizb-e-Islami to adopt a new approach towards them,” said the former prime minister.

Hekmatyar’s remarks plunged the Hizb-e-Islami into a crisis as its leaders were surprised to see what some described as a statement in favour of Dai’sh.

The Express Tribune has learnt that the Hizb central council is likely to meet soon to explore ways to respond to criticism at Hekmatyar’s remarks.

In a separate statement, Hekmatyar has condemned Iran as “a country against Islam” and said the Islamic Republic was “another Israel for the Islamic countries.”

Hekmatyar accused Iran of “fomenting sectarian hatred between Shias and Sunnis in Pakistan.”

Blasts in Sunni mosques during prayers and the killing of Sunni leaders is the handiwork of Iranian Pasdaran-e-Inqilab (Revolutionary Guards),” he alleged. He mentioned the killing of former NWFP governor Fazale Haq.

“Iran’s politics is based on lies. Iran has always stood with the enemy and stabbed the Muslim Ummah at the back,” the Hizb chief said.

Published in The Express Tribune, July 7th, 2015.

Let's be politically correct and call them Daish and not the Islamic State...because they are not an Islamic State.

Reportedly they find the name Daish/Da'ish/Da'esh derogatory, because it sounds similar to the Arabic words Daes, which means "one who crushes something underfoot", and Dahes, which means "one who sows discord".

All the more reason.
 
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Interesting.. Hekmatyar and Haqqanis on opposite sides.
 
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Hekmatyar's Afghan militants deny joining Islamic State | Zee News


Peshawar: An influential Afghan militant faction on Monday denied reports that it had shifted loyalty to Islamic State`s budding movement in the region.


A spokesman for Hizb-i-Islami, led by Afghan commander Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, said a statement that had circulated in Afghan media last week alleging Hekmatyar had thrown his support behind the ultra-hardline jihadist movement also known as ISIS was a fake.

"It was not true. None of us had issued any such statement in support of ISIS in Afghanistan against the Afghan Taliban," spokesman Haroon Zarghoon said.

Any shift by Hekmatyar, believed to command the loyalty of fighters in Afghanistan`s eastern Kunar and Nuristan provinces, would boost Islamic State`s expansionist ambitions in Afghanistan and Pakistan as a rival to the main Taliban insurgency.

U.S. drone strikes last week killed several leaders of the new IS offshoots, who are mostly former Taliban, in the eastern province of Nangarhar.

Afghan intelligence said the movement`s chief for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Hafez Saeed, was killed on Friday, although an IS website cast doubt on this by releasing an undated audio message purportedly from him on Monday.

Hekmatyar became a hero to many Afghans while leading mujahideen fighters against the Soviet occupation of the country in the 1980s. In the civil war of the early 1990s, forces led by him took part in fighting in Kabul that is estimated to have killed tens of thousands of people.

A former Afghan prime minister, he was designated a global terrorist by the U.S. State Department in 2003 for his links to al Qaeda and the Taliban. More recently, he is believed to have developed a rivalry with the Taliban`s supreme leader Mullah Mohammad Omar.

Hekmatyar left Afghanistan in the mid-1990s and is believed to be in Pakistan, although his exact location is unknown. Many of his former supporters have joined either the Afghan government or the Taliban.

Reuters
 
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