as Obama meets Karzai after Rabbani killing
KABUL (AFP) – A Taliban suicide bomber with concealed explosives in a
turban on Tuesday assassinated former Afghan president Burhanuddin
Rabbani, who was leading government peace efforts, police said.
In New York the US President Barack Obama met with Afghan President
Hamid Karzai on Tuesday in New York, hours after a suicide bomber in
Kabul assassinated Afghanistan’s former leader Burhanuddin Rabbani.
Karzai was due to cut short his trip to the United Nations General
Assembly shortly after his meeting with Obama, to return home after the
killing of Rabbani, who was leading the government’s peace talks with
the Taliban.
The bomber struck during a meeting at the Kabul home of Rabbani, who
was last year appointed chief of the Afghan High Peace Council that
President Hamid Karzai tasked with negotiating with the Taliban.
His death is the most high-profile political assassination since the
2001 US-led invasion ousted the Taliban from power and comes just two
months after Karzai’s brother Ahmed Wali Karzai was also killed.
The attackers arrived at Rabbani’s house with Mohammad Massom
Stanikzai, Rabbani’s deputy, for a meeting before the turban bomber
detonated his explosives, according to one source amid conflicting
reports of the incident.
A member of the High Peace Council, Fazel Karim Aymaq, said the men
had come with “special messages” from the Taliban and were “very
trusted.”
Kabul criminal investigations chief Mohammad Zaher said two men
“negotiating with Rabbani on behalf of the Taliban” arrived at his
house, one with explosives hidden in his turban.
“He approached Rabbani and detonated his explosives. Rabbani was
martyred and four others including Massom Stanikzai (his deputy) were
injured.”
The bomber struck close to the US embassy, making it the the second
attack within a week in Kabul’s supposedly secure diplomatic zone.
The killing prompted Afghan President Hamid Karzai to cut short his
visit to the United States, his spokesman said, adding he was still
expected to meet US President Barack Obama as scheduled before leaving.
An AFP reporter saw an ambulance at the scene and said police had blocked off surrounding roads.
The reporter also heard guards at the house shouting for an ambulance for Rabbani’s deputy.
Two of the former president’s political allies, who did not want to
be named and speaking before police confirmed Rabbani’s death, wept as
they told AFP he had been killed.
“Yes, he is dead,” said one of the two sources by telephone.
The Taliban were not immediately reachable for comment, but the
insurgency led by its militia has hit Kabul increasingly hard in recent
months.
The Pakistani government swiftly condemned the assassination,
describing Rabbani as a “friend” with whom Islamabad was working closely
on peace efforts.
“The people of Pakistan stand by their Afghan brothers and sisters in
this moment of grief,” a joint statement released by President Asif Ali
Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said, just days after the
United States accused the Pakistani government of having ties to
Taliban faction the Haqqani network.
Among the most high-profile attacks was last week’s 20-hour siege of
the US embassy and the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force
(ISAF) headquarters which left 14 people dead.
Rabbani was president of Afghanistan from 1992 until the Taliban took power in 1996 and headed a country wracked by civil war.
Karzai’s brainchild, the High Peace Council was intended to open a
dialogue with insurgents who have been trying to bring down his
government since the US-led invasion overthrew their regime.
The 68-member council, hand-picked by the president, was inaugurated
on October 7, 2010, amid mounting reports of secret peace talks with
Taliban leaders and key insurgent groups.
Delivering his acceptance speech, Rabbani said he was “confident”
that peace was possible, according to a statement from the palace.
“I hope we are able to take major steps in bringing peace and fulfil
our duties with tireless effort and help from God,” he was quoted as
saying.
According to Human Rights Watch, Rabbani is among prominent Afghans
implicated in war crimes during the brutal fighting that killed or
displaced hundreds of thousands of Afghans in the early 1990s.
Click to signup for FREE news updates, latest information and hottest gists everyday
Advertise on NigerianEye.com to reach thousands of our daily users
Home
Unlabelled
Taliban turban bomber kills Afghan ex-president
Taliban turban bomber kills Afghan ex-president
NigerianEye
-
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
No comments
Post a Comment
Kindly drop a comment below.
(Comments are moderated. Clean comments will be approved immediately)
Advert Enquires - Reach out to us at NigerianEye@gmail.com