Differences emerge between Taliban factions

Our views and thoughts have dominated us to such an extent that power monopolization and defamation of the entire (ruling) system have become common…..this situation cannot be tolerated.

NewsBharati    18-Feb-2023 13:30:19 PM
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Kabul, Feb 18: Eighteen months after the Taliban conquered Kabul, there are signs of a serious internal rift between Pakistan-backed Supreme Leader Hibatullah Akundzada and the Emirate government in Kabul with interior minister Sirajuddin Haqqani taking on the Kandahar-based third Emir principally over the education of girl child and working women in Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
 

Taliban 
 
On February 11, Haqqani from his home base Khost said: “Our views and thoughts have dominated us to such an extent that power monopolization and defamation of the entire (ruling) system have become common…..this situation cannot be tolerated.” He added that the Taliban administration should desist from adopting policies that would drive a wedge between “the ruling system and the people, allowing others to exploit it to defame Islam.” The powerful Kandahar faction of Akundzada got back the next day, essentially asking Haqqani to desist from vilifying the Emir in public as it was against Islamic ethics and suggested that the Interior Minister should air his grievances discreetly in private. Just like in the past, politics and power are always complicated in Afghanistan with brute muscle, money, tribe, and, of course, Pakistan playing a part in the new great game. One must remember that Mullah Akundzada lived his entire life in Pakistan before 2021 in Peshawar and Karachi and was under the protection of Rawalpindi GHQ against the US armed drone attack. It was the same Pakistanis who exposed the second Emir Akhtar Mansour to a deadly American drone strike in May 2016 in Balochistan. Akundzada is a Durrani Pashtun, Haqqani belongs to the eponymous Haqqani tribe from Loya Paktia in eastern Afghanistan, and Taliban Defence Minister Mullah Yaqoob, son of Taliban founder and first Emir Mullah Omar, is a Ghilzai Pashtun from Zabul, neighboring Kandahar.
 
 
 
According to available inputs, the Taliban government in Kabul with Haqqani and Yaqoob on the same side is at odds with the Emir-ul-Momineen or commander of the faithful over the downside of imposing ultra-conservative Sunni Islam on the minorities, particularly women of Afghanistan. Akundzada, who remains hidden from public view in Kandahar for security reasons, ordered the banning of Afghan women from most workplaces and all education since his ultra-conservative Sunni Pashtun group swept Kabul on August 15, 2021. Such are the draconian measures on women and minorities that even Haqqani, who heads the eponymous Haqqani Network terrorist organization, and Yaqoob, a former mujahid, are seen as moderates before Akundzada. This has resulted in the Taliban government being treated as a global pariah with no recognition and no institutionalized aid from the international community. With the internal rift within the Taliban coming out in the open, this could lead to a leadership change in Kabul as the Kandahari clerics are backed with religious power or a Loya Jirga could be summoned to sort out the differences or Akundzada would have to make way for another successor. One must remember that Emir ul Momineen is a leader for life. But Afghan politics is more complicated than that and answers to these questions lie across the Durand Line in Rawalpindi GHQ of the Pakistan Army.
 
 
Today, there are serious differences between Pakistan and the Taliban government in Afghanistan with the former fencing the international border as per British Durand Line and the latter against it and wanting the entire Pashtun territory to come under Kabul control. While this has led to cross-border firing involving artillery, the matters have got so complicated that credible reports indicate that the Taliban government refused to give the travel visa to the present Director General (ISI), once their mentor cum handler, to visit Kabul and wanted the visit to be postponed to a later convenient date.