Afghan forces catch Mullah Omar's security chief (Agencies) Updated: 2004-12-15 11:50
Afghan security forces have captured Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar's
personal security chief as he traveled in a van to the southern city of
Kandahar, provincial officials told Reuters on Tuesday.
The capture of Toor Mullah Naqibullah Khan, who headed Mullah Omar's
household security, could help U.S. and Afghan forces track down his boss, one
of the most wanted fugitives in the U.S.-led war on terror.
![Security guards for Afghan President Hamid Kharzai guard a school hosting a ceremony for the National Children Conference, aimed to promote better life and education conditions for Afghanistan's children, in Kabul December 14, 2004. Afghan security forces have captured the Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar's personal security chief as he travelled in a van to the southern city of Kandahar, provincial officials told Reuters on Tuesday. [Reuters]](xin_051201151153249112515.jpg) Security guards for Afghan President Hamid
Kharzai guard a school hosting a ceremony for the National Children
Conference, aimed to promote better life and education conditions for
Afghanistan's children, in Kabul December 14, 2004. Afghan security forces
have captured the Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar's personal security
chief as he travelled in a van to the southern city of Kandahar,
provincial officials told Reuters on Tuesday.
[Reuters] | Osama bin Laden, who ran his al Qaeda network in Afghanistan under the
protection of the Taliban, is also believed to be at large in the region.
"We have arrested top Taliban figures Toor Mullah Naqibullah Khan and Mullah
Qayoom Angar on the way between Arghandab and Kandahar. They were carrying a
satellite telephone and some important documents," said a senior Kandahar
security official, who requested anonymity.
The official said eight more Taliban fighters were arrested in Kandahar after
the two men were caught, unarmed, on Monday evening. A cache of remote control
bombs, time bombs and several other explosive devices and radios was also
seized.
"We are hopeful we will arrest more Taliban figures and we hope that we can
arrest their leader Mullah Omar," he said, though he would not venture what the
chances were of finding either Mullah Omar or bin Laden.
Khalid Pashtun, spokesman for the provincial government, confirmed the
arrests.
With the latest captures, security forces have picked up at least 27
militants since Saturday night, including the brother of a former Taliban
governor of Kandahar.
The security official said they were picked up following a tip-off from a
Taliban insider.
Mullah Omar's Taliban militia have been waging an insurgency in the south and
southeast of Afghanistan since they were driven from power in late 2001 by U.S.
and Afghan forces after al Qaeda attacked the United States on Sept. 11.
The Taliban's most senior military commander played down the significance of
the arrests.
"Maybe they are ordinary Taliban," Mullah Dadullah, one of the movement's
10-member leadership council, told Reuters by satellite telephone.
But Pashtun said Naqibullah Khan was a dangerous killer who was still in
charge of security for Mullah Omar.
"During the (October presidential) election this man killed nine government
intelligence agents in the Meyansheen district of Kandahar province," he said.
The commander of U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan, Lieutenant General David
Barno, said last week intelligence showed the Taliban in turmoil over whether to
give up their fight and accept an offer of reconciliation from President Hamid
Karzai.
Karzai, who won a strong mandate in the country's first presidential election
on Oct. 9, has offered to let Taliban fighters resume a peaceful life.
"We see indications that there are arguments even among the leadership about
whether it's time to accept reconciliation with the Afghan government," Barno
told Reuters last Thursday.
That optimism was shared by former president Burhanuddin Rabbani, whose own
government collapsed in the mid-1990s amid a civil war that paved the way for
the Taliban's takeover.
"I think the Taliban problem will be solved through the negotiations started
by the government ... I think there will not be big problems," Rabbani told
Reuters on Sunday, adding that traditional tribal councils could play a role.
Some Taliban figures will be shown no clemency because of the gravity of
their crimes against the nation, officials say. The government, with input from
U.S. authorities, is expected to draw up a list of militants who will not be
accepted back in the fold.
Last week, U.S.-led forces launched a winter offensive called "Operation
Lightning Freedom" aimed a preventing the Taliban from regrouping to pose a
threat to a parliamentary election due in April, after their failure to disrupt
the presidential poll.
There are about 18,000 U.S.-led troops in Afghanistan helping Afghan security
forces hunt down Taliban guerrillas and some rare al Qaeda remnants still in the
country.
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