Gulf News

Taliban deny their deputy PM Mullah Baradar is dead

Voice message issued rejecting claims he had been killed or injured in a clash

- KABUL

The Taliban have denied that one of their top leaders has been killed in a shoot-out with rivals, following rumours about internal splits in the movement nearly a month after its lightning victory over the Western-backed government in Kabul.

Sulail Shaheen, a Taliban spokesman, said Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, former head of the Taliban political office who was named deputy prime minister last week, issued a voice message rejecting claims he had been killed or injured in a clash.

‘Totally baseless’

“He says it is lies and totally baseless,” Shaheen said in a message on Twitter.

The Taliban also released video footage purportedl­y showing Baradar at meetings in the southern city of Kandahar. Reuters could not immediatel­y verify the footage.

The denials follow days of rumours that supporters of Baradar had clashed with those of Sirajuddin Haqqani, head of the Haqqani network that is based near the border with Pakistan and was blamed for some of the worst suicide attacks of the war.

The rumours follow speculatio­n over possible rivalries between military commanders like Haqqani and leaders from the political office in Doha like Baradar, who led diplomatic efforts to reach a settlement with the United States.

The Taliban have repeatedly denied the speculatio­n over internal divisions.

Baradar, once seen as the likely head of a Taliban government, had not been seen in public for some time and was not part of the ministeria­l delegation which met Qatari Foreign Minister Shaikh Mohammad Bin Abdul Rahman Al Thani in Kabul on Sunday.

Bitter recriminat­ions

The movement’s supreme leader, Mullah Haibatulla­h Akhundzada, has also not been seen in public since the Taliban seized Kabul on August 15, although he issued a public statement when the new government was formed last week.

Speculatio­n over Taliban leaders has been fed by the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the death of the movement’s founder, Mullah Omar, which was only made public in 2015 two years after it happened, setting off bitter recriminat­ions among the leadership.

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Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar
Reuters ■ Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar

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