Afghan Taliban admit covering up Mullah Omar's death: foreign media

By
AFP
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Afghan Taliban admit covering up Mullah Omar's death: foreign media
KABUL: The Afghan Taliban have admitted that they covered up the death of longtime leader Mullah Omar for more than two years, a foreign news agency claimed on Monday.

According to the Agence France-Presse (AFP), the Taliban have admitted that the reclusive former leader died in 2013, as was first claimed by the Afghan intelligence, and that several key leaders decided to conceal the news of his death.

The group had continued as recently as July to release official statements in the name of Omar, who had not been seen in public since the Taliban were toppled from power in Kabul in 2001.

They confirmed on July 30 that he had died but did not say when, deepening internal divisions as many insurgents accused the leadership of covering up his death for two years.

A Taliban statement Monday admitted for the first time that he died on April 23, 2013. The detail was buried in a biography of new leader Mullah Akhtar Mansour, Omar's longtime deputy.

"Several key members of the supreme leading council of the Islamic Emirate (Taliban) and authentic religious scholars together decided on concealing the tragic news of passing away of (Omar)... and keep this secret limited to the very few colleagues who were already informed of this incorrigible loss," the biography said.

"One of the main reasons behind this decision was... that 2013 was considered the final year of power testing between the mujahideen and foreign invaders who... had announced that at the end of 2014, all military operations by foreign troops would be concluded."

NATO ended its combat mission in Afghanistan last December and pulled out the bulk of its troops although a 13,000-strong residual force remains for training and counter-terrorism operations.—AFP