pakistani342
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According to Afghan imagination, it seems Pakistan is even behind IS in Afghanistan
Article here, excerpts below:
@A-Team, @Sabawoon_Noorzai
...
Haji Ghalib Mujahid, 58, is the civilian district governor in a remote region in the eastern Afghan province of Nangarhar. But the bearded figure spends most of his time fighting the Islamic State (IS). Locally known by its Arabic name Daesh, IS still control pockets of the mountainous Achin district, which border's Pakistan's tribal areas to the east.
Ghalib's day begins at 6 a.m., when he begins receiving petitioners, most of whom need his help to obtain Afghan identity papers or help in reopening schools and clinics. He also looks after thousands of displaced families in Achin.
But by 10 a.m. he picks up his Kalashnikov rifle and puts on his bulletproof vest. His SUV often leads the police and army convoys that chase militants in the distant mountain hamlets.
...
Ghalib, a former police officer, knew Dost from the days when they fought with the Islamist mujahidin guerillas against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s. The two became close friends during Ghalib's four-year incarceration in a U.S. detention center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
"Indeed, we were close friends when we were there [in Guantanamo]. But when we returned to Afghanistan, we parted ways," he said. "I once told Muslim Dost, 'Don't go to Pakistan because they will use you [against your own country]'."
Afghan officials accuse Pakistan of supporting insurgents. During the past two months, Ghalib has repeatedly accused Islamabad of being behind the IS offensive in Nangarhar. Pakistani officials have not commented on the accusations, but Islamabad often rejects claims that it supports Afghan rebels.
Article here, excerpts below:
@A-Team, @Sabawoon_Noorzai
...
Haji Ghalib Mujahid, 58, is the civilian district governor in a remote region in the eastern Afghan province of Nangarhar. But the bearded figure spends most of his time fighting the Islamic State (IS). Locally known by its Arabic name Daesh, IS still control pockets of the mountainous Achin district, which border's Pakistan's tribal areas to the east.
Ghalib's day begins at 6 a.m., when he begins receiving petitioners, most of whom need his help to obtain Afghan identity papers or help in reopening schools and clinics. He also looks after thousands of displaced families in Achin.
But by 10 a.m. he picks up his Kalashnikov rifle and puts on his bulletproof vest. His SUV often leads the police and army convoys that chase militants in the distant mountain hamlets.
...
Ghalib, a former police officer, knew Dost from the days when they fought with the Islamist mujahidin guerillas against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s. The two became close friends during Ghalib's four-year incarceration in a U.S. detention center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
"Indeed, we were close friends when we were there [in Guantanamo]. But when we returned to Afghanistan, we parted ways," he said. "I once told Muslim Dost, 'Don't go to Pakistan because they will use you [against your own country]'."
Afghan officials accuse Pakistan of supporting insurgents. During the past two months, Ghalib has repeatedly accused Islamabad of being behind the IS offensive in Nangarhar. Pakistani officials have not commented on the accusations, but Islamabad often rejects claims that it supports Afghan rebels.