Oman Daily Observer

Plane believed to carry Afghan VP diverted from landing

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KABUL: A private jet, which Afghan officials suspected was bringing back embattled Vice President Rashid Dostum from Turkey, was turned away when it tried to land in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif, officials said on Tuesday

Dostum, who flew to Turkey in May for medical treatment, has been facing accusation­s that he ordered a political rival to be detained and tortured in a case that drew strong condemnati­on from the Kabul government’s internatio­nal backers, including the United States.

Dostum, a powerful ethnic Uzbek leader with decades of experience in Afghanista­n’s wars and turbulent politics, has denied the accusation­s.

Afghan security officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said a private jet carrying seven Turkish engineers to Mazar-i-Sharif late on Monday was ordered to fly to Kabul for checks following indication­s that Dostum was trying to come back to Afghanista­n. The plane instead diverted to Turkmenist­an.

A senior official from Dostum’s Junbish party, denied that he had tried to enter Afghanista­n, saying that a guest of provincial governor Atta Mohammad Noor had been due to land in Mazar but had gone to Turkmenist­an because of technical issues.

“If General Dostum wants to come to Afghanista­n, no power can stop him because he is Afghanista­n’s vice president,” said Junbish deputy head Shujauddin Shuja.

However, witnesses said hundreds of Dostum’s supporters, some carrying posters with slogans like “Welcome back our dear leader!” were waiting in Mazari-Sharif, the closest big city to Dostum’s home region of Jawzjan, on the border with Turkmenist­an.

Dostum is the main leader of the ethnic Uzbek minority, a group estimated to make up some 9 per cent of the population, and has been a vocal critic of President Ashraf Ghani.

He has not been formally charged with any offence but his departure for Turkey was widely seen as a convenient cover that allowed the government to sideline him without the embarrassm­ent of a public dismissal.

However, the case has underlined growing political and ethnic tensions that have threatened the stability of Ghani’s unwieldy government, already under pressure over deteriorat­ing security across Afghanista­n.

Last month, Noor, the powerful governor of Balkh province and one of the main leaders of the Persianspe­aking ethnic Tajiks, and deputy Chief Executive Mohammad Mohaqiq met Dostum in Turkey.

The meeting was widely seen as a possible prelude to a broad opposition movement against the government, which critics say is dominated by Ghani’s Pashtun community.

A spokesman for the Natoled Resolute Support force, which maintains troops at the Mazari-Sharif airport under German command, said that internatio­nal officials had no role in turning the aircraft away.

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