World

Taliban leader denies reports of leadership row in new video

September 16, 2021
Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar
Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar

KABUL -- Afghanistan's acting deputy prime minister Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar has appeared in a video to deny reports that he was injured in a clash with a rival faction of the Taliban, BBC reported.

The Taliban co-founder had disappeared from view for several days.

There have been reports of a row between Taliban leaders, involving Baradar and a rival faction loyal to the powerful Haqqani network.

But in the new interview, Mr Baradar denied reports of internal strife.

"No, this is not true; I am OK and healthy," Baradar said, when asked about whether he had been hurt.

"I was out of Kabul and I did not have access to the internet to reject the fake news," he added.

The short clip -- posted on Twitter by the Taliban's political office in Doha -- showed him seated on a sofa next to a state television interviewer, apparently reading from a sheet of paper.

"Thank God we have good relations with each other and we respect each other. Our relations are even better than a family," he said.

Baradar was the first Taliban leader to communicate directly with a US president, in a telephone conversation with Donald Trump in 2020. Before that, he signed the Doha agreement on the withdrawal of US troops on behalf of the Taliban.

The new video comes after senior Taliban officials told the BBC that supporters of Baradar brawled with a faction loyal to Khalil ur-Rahman Haqqani -- the minister for refugees and a prominent figure within the militant Haqqani network.

The sources said the argument had broken out because Baradar was unhappy about the structure of their interim government.

The row also reportedly stemmed from divisions over who in the Taliban should take credit for their victory in Afghanistan.

Baradar reportedly believes that the emphasis should be placed on diplomacy carried out by people like him, while members of the Haqqani group - which is run by one of the most senior Taliban figures -- and their backers say it was achieved through fighting.

Rumours about a falling-out have been spreading since late last week, when Baradar -- one of the best-known faces of the Taliban -- disappeared from public view. There was speculation on social media that he might have died.

The Taliban sources told the BBC that Baradar had left Kabul and travelled to the city of Kandahar following the row.

Before the new interview was released, an official from the Taliban's cultural commission said on Twitter that the interview would be aired on state RTA TV to disprove "enemy propaganda".


September 16, 2021
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