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19 March 2024

Taliban's Mullah Omar is dead?

In this undated image released by the FBI, Mullah Omar is seen in a wanted poster. An Afghan official says his government is examining claims that reclusive Taliban leader Mullah Omar is dead. The Taliban could not be immediately reached for comment on the government’s claims about Omar, who has been declared dead many times before. (FBI via AP, File)

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By Agencies

A spokesman for Afghanistan's intelligence agency said on Wednesday that Taliban supreme leader Mullah Mohammad Omar died two years ago in a Pakistani hospital.

The statement by National Directorate of Security spokesman Hasib Sediqi came after the Afghan government said it was investigating reports of Omar's death, just days ahead of an expected second round of peace talks with the Taliban.

The NDS has previously said privately that its intelligence indicated Omar was dead, but it has not provided proof.  

Taliban have not officially confirmed the death of the supreme leader of the Taliban, who has not been seen publicly since the 2001 US-led invasion of Afghanistan that toppled the Taliban government in Kabul.

Rumours of Omar's ill-health and even death have regularly surfaced in the past, but the latest claims -- just two days before peace talks with the insurgents -- mark the first such confirmation from the Afghan government.

"Mullah Omar is dead," Haseeb Sediqi, the spokesman for the National Directorate of Security, told AFP.

"He died in a Karachi hospital in April 2013... under mysterious circumstances."

Sediqi's statement comes after unnamed government and militant sources told media, including AFP, that the one-eyed leader died two or three years ago, and after the Aghan government said it was investigating reports of the death.

"We can confirm that Mullah Omar died two years ago... in Pakistan due to an illness," a senior official in Afghanistan's national unity government told AFP earlier.

"He was buried in Zabul province (in southern Afghanistan)," said the official, citing Afghan intelligence sources.

Omar's death would mark a significant blow to an almost 14-year insurgency, which is riven by internal divisions and threatened by the rise of the Islamic State group in South Asia.

His death could trigger a power struggle within the movement, observers say, with insurgent sources claiming that Mullah Mansour, the current Taliban deputy, and Omar's son Mohammad Yakoub are both top contenders to replace him.

 

Taliban faultlines

The Taliban in April published a descriptive biography of the "charismatic" supreme leader, in a surprise move apparently aimed at countering the creeping influence of the Islamic State group within their ranks.

The Taliban have reportedly seen defections to the Islamic State in recent months, with some insurgents expressing disaffection with the low-profile leader Omar.

The biography, posted on the Taliban's official website to commemorate Omar's apparent 19th year as supreme leader, described him as being actively involved in "jihadi activities" -- trying to dispel speculation that he had died.

And earlier this month in a message released in Omar's name, the leader was quoted as hailing the peace process as "legitimate".

The comments, the first reputedly made by Omar on the nascent dialogue, eased concerns at the time that the process lacked the leadership's backing.

A member of the Quetta Shura, the Taliban's governing council, voiced doubt over whether that message -- released just before the Muslim festival of Eid-ul-Fitr -- was from Mullah Omar himself.

"For the last few years he has not attended any big gathering, neither has he sent any audio message to his followers," the member, who requested anonymity, told AFP on Wednesday.

"That gives us reason to believe that he has died."

Waheed Muzhda, a Kabul-based analyst who served in the 1996-2001 Taliban regime's foreign ministry, said any confirmation of his death from the militants would bode ill for the unity of their movement.

"It would mean that messages sent out in the name of Mullah Omar in the last two years were all lies and deception," Muzhda told AFP.

Afghan officials sat down with Taliban cadres earlier this month in Murree, a tourist town in the hills north of the Pakistani capital Islamabad, for their first face-to-face talks aimed at ending the bloody insurgency.

They agreed to meet again in the coming weeks, drawing international praise, but many ground commanders openly questioned the legitimacy of the Taliban negotiators, exposing dangerous faultlines within the movement.

Afghan officials are set to meet Taliban militants later this week for a second round -- expected to take place in Pakistan -- with the government pledging to press for a ceasefire.

The split within the Taliban between those for and against talks has been worsened by the emergence of a local branch of the Islamic State group, the Middle Eastern jihadist outfit that last year declared a "caliphate" across large areas of Iraq and Syria that it controls.

The Taliban warned IS recently against expanding in the region, but this has not stopped some fighters, inspired by the group's success, defecting to swear allegiance to IS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi instead of the invisible Mullah Omar.