Islamic State violence dents Taliban claims of safer Afghanistan
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[November 09, 2021]
By James Mackenzie
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Last month, the
family of Mawlavi Ezzatullah, a member of Afghanistan's Hizb-e Islami
party, received a WhatsApp message from his phone: "We have slaughtered
your Mawlavi Ezzat, come and collect his body."
Ezzatullah's killing, in the eastern province of Nangarhar, was one of a
steady stream of assassinations and bombings that have undermined
Taliban claims that they have brought greater security to Afghanistan
after 40 years of war.
Victims have ranged from former security officials from the ousted
government to journalists, civil society activists, mullahs, Taliban
fighters and apparently random targets like Ezzatullah, whose family
said he had no enemies they knew of.
The Taliban have said their victory has brought stability to
Afghanistan, where thousands of people were killed in fighting between
the group and Western-backed forces between 2001 and 2021 before the
hardline Islamists emerged victorious.
But on just one day last week, pictures from Jalalabad - the provincial
capital of Nangarhar - appeared online showing two bodies swinging from
a rope. Residents also reported a mullah's murder and video footage was
circulated of a group of gunmen firing into a car, apparently killing
its occupants, one of whom was identified by local journalists as a
Taliban official.
Reuters was unable to verify the images and footage independently.
On Sunday, according to locals, three bodies were brought into a
hospital in Jalalabad after a roadside bomb explosion that apparently
targeted Taliban fighters in a pickup truck.
Later that day, gunmen shot a former Afghan army soldier in front of his
house, killing him and two friends standing nearby.
The Taliban have downplayed such incidents, saying that after decades of
war, it will take time for the country to be completely pacified.
"There are 34 provinces in the country and in a week, 20 cases will be
prevented for every one that takes place," said spokesman Bilal Karimi.
"We have had 20 years of revolution and invasion and the level of these
incidents will go down."
Some former soldiers and intelligence officers from the ousted
government blame members of the Taliban for targeting them since taking
over. The group has promised there would be no reprisals, but accepts
rogue fighters may have acted alone.
Many targeted killings remain unclaimed and some may be the result of
local vendettas.
But others look the result of increasingly open conflict between the
Taliban and a local affiliate of Islamic State, a development which the
new U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan, Tom West, said on
Monday was causing concern in Washington.
The militant jihadi group has claimed some of the deadliest attacks in
Afghanistan in recent months in which hundreds of people have been
killed, mainly in big cities.
"They are trying to undermine and discredit the Taliban Emirate. The
Emirate promised security and they're trying to show they can't deliver
it," said Antonio Giustozzi, a specialist in jihadi groups from the
Royal United Services Institute in London.
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A member of Taliban security forces stands guard among crowds of
people walking past in a street in Kabul, Afghanistan September 4,
2021. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
He said Islamic State, which he estimated to have
around 4,000 fighters, had been carrying out a campaign of targeted
killings since around the summer of 2020 and had continued since the
Taliban victory in August on a "roughly comparable scale".
'BIDEN HIRELINGS'
For many going about their business, the violence feels particularly
menacing.
"I have never been as terrified as I am now," said a university
professor in Nangarhar who has also worked as a journalist and who
spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of being targeted. He
described events in Nangarhar as "total chaos."
The violence has fuelled fears that Afghanistan could collapse into
anarchy and even return to a new phase of civil war, creating a
haven for militant groups to launch attacks in neighbouring
countries and the West.
"This is the scenario that has everyone worried," said one Western
official with long experience of the region.
Islamic State, which first appeared in Afghanistan in late 2014 and
adopted the title Islamic State Khorasan after an ancient name for
the region, has been trying to recover from a bruising series of
defeats in 2018 and 2019.
The group has claimed a series of strikes against Shi'ite mosques
and other targets since the Taliban's victory in August, most
recently on the main military hospital in Kabul which killed at
least 25 people.
Less commonly reported are frequent, smaller atrocities which have
been taking place not only in Nangarhar, long a stronghold of
Islamic State.
Areas affected include Ghazni in central Afghanistan, Herat in the
west, Balkh in the north, and Paktia, Paktika and Khost in the
southeast.
"The Taliban militia are lost in panic, they do not know how to
conceal their shame," an Islamic State video posted on the group's
Telegram channel on Sunday said, accusing the Taliban of being
"Biden hirelings".
As an insurgency the Taliban proved an effective and cohesive
fighting force. Keeping the peace in a country in crisis presents
fresh challenges, including uniting different factions, values and
norms within the movement.
Giustozzi, who wrote a book on Islamic State in Afghanistan, said
the group, which had retreated into remote strongholds in the east
and northeast of the country, was trying to hit the Taliban while
the group is still grappling with the transition from insurgency to
government.
"They know that if they allow the Taliban Emirate to consolidate,
next spring the Taliban will move to destroy them," he said.
(Additional reporting by Islamabad newsroom; Editing by Mike Collett-White)
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