Arab News

Taliban will gain from ensuing chaos in Afghanista­n, expert tells Arab News

- Continued from Page One

“So far seven dead bodies and 119 wounded people have been brought to Kabul hospitals,” Waheed Majroh, a spokesman for the Health Ministry, told AFP.

The funeral of Ezadyar, the son of an influentia­l Afghan senator, was attended by senior government figures including Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah and Foreign Minister Salahuddin Rabbani, but they escaped unharmed.

No group has so far claimed the attack, with the Taliban — the biggest insurgent group in Afghanista­n — denying any involvemen­t.

The fresh killings are likely to further polarize a city that has been on edge since a truck bombing on Wednesday in Kabul’s diplomatic quarter killed 90 people and wounded hundreds, in the deadliest attack on the Afghan capital since 2001.

President Ashraf Ghani made a televised appeal for national unity after the funeral bombings. “The country is under attack,” he said. “We must stay strong and united.”

Baker Atyani, a veteran journalist who has covered militant groups for two decades, blamed the chaos on the power struggles within the Afghan government and the ineffectiv­e role of the internatio­nal coali- tion led by the US.

“The Haqqani network has said it was not behind the attack; Daesh, which goes by the name the Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP), said it is not behind the attack; and we have heard the denial from Taliban — all this is strange,” said Atyani.

There is chaos in Afghanista­n because “of there being a state with two heads — President Ashraf Ghani and Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah,” he added.

Ghani is a Pashtun while Abdullah is of mixed Pashtun-Tajik heritage but is often seen as having supported the latter group more strongly. Atyani said the rivalry between the two ethnic groups is very well known.

He added that there has been uncertaint­y and a deep struggle for power in Afghanista­n ever since Abdullah refused to accept the results of the last presidenti­al elections. “It was the former US Secretary of State John Kerry who came up with this weird equation through which he created a slot for a chief executive when there was no such provision in the Afghan constituti­on,” said Atyani.

“If you look at the larger picture in Afghanista­n, this is the failure of all those foreign countries who came into Afghanista­n under the US leadership. They could not deliver what they promised to the Afghan people. The internatio­nal coalition has, in the last 13 years, spent over $1 trillion and yet they failed to bring peace and developmen­t to the warravaged country,” said Atyani.

“Today, a mere 10 percent of the Afghans have access to electricit­y,” he added.

The government has blamed the Taliban-allied Haqqani network for the attack.

Atyani said he did not believe in the allegation­s leveled against Pakistan by the Afghan government. “There is no love lost between the NDS (National Directorat­e of Security of Afghanista­n) and the ISI (Inter-Services Intelligen­ce of Pakistan). As an observer, I do not buy the Afghan intelligen­ce’s assessment that Pakistan is behind this attack. This is not correct.”

According to Atyani, the chaos in Kabul would directly benefit the Taliban. “In any case the writ of the Afghan government does not run large in many districts and towns. In some, there are shadow government­s led by the Taliban and in some others there is Daesh, which has added to the confusion. There has been no method in Daesh’s madness. All their attacks have been directed against the civilians.”

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