| Home
Sacked Afghan governor admits sending 3,000 followers to join Taliban
Afghanistan News.Net Saturday 21st November, 2009 (ANI)
London, Nov. 21 : The former governor of Afghanistan's Helmand province, Sher Mohammed Akhundzada, has admitted that he encouraged up to 3,000 of his followers to join the Taliban following his dismissal under international pressure.
"When I was no longer governor the government stopped paying for the people who supported me. I sent 3,000 of them off to the Taliban because I could not afford to support them but the Taliban was making payments," The Telegraph quoted Akhundzada, as saying.
Akhundzada, a former mujahideen fighter against the Russians, was sacked as Helmand's governor in 2005 after being accused of being linked to the opium trade. Nine tons of opium were found in his cellars in 2005.
The move coincided with a huge upsurge in the number of British deaths in Afghanistan.
Before moving into Helmand province in 2006, British forces had suffered five deaths, but the death toll has risen to 235, including 98 dead this year.
"Lots of people, including my family members, went back to the Taliban because they had lost respect for the government. The British bore the brunt of this because the Taliban became the defenders of Helmand, where the local tradition doesn't allow foreigners to go into people's homes," Akhundzada said.
Brigadier Ed Butler, who commanded the Helmand Task Force in 2006, confirmed hundreds of Akhundzada's followers had been involved in clashes with British troops.
"There was a force of fighters who had lost one powerful leader, Sher Mohammad Akhundzada, and had decided to support the Taliban. Our forces no doubt engaged in the ensuring battles with some of them over the long hot summer of 2006," he said.resident Hamid Karzai is known to believe that Akhundzada's removal was a disaster, and has publicly praised the senator for holding the Taliban at bay.
Karzai is now rumoured to be considering restoring Akhundzada, who is now an Afghan senator, to his old job in a forthcoming reshuffle. Email this story to a friend
Comments on this story
Mike P. 11-21-09, 07:54 AM |
Sacked Afghan governor admits sending 3,000 followers to join Taliban
Nine Tons of opium in his cellar?
You think just maybe he was involved in the opium trade? Great deduction there Sherlock.
|
senior 11-21-09, 02:58 PM |
SCUM BAG
why Is This Scum Bag still alive
|
Have your say on this story
|
 |
 |
- UN removes five former Taliban members from sanctions list
The UN announced Friday it has removed five former senior members of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan from its sanctions blacklist. [read story]
- Six soldiers, 15 civilians killed in Afghanistan
Six NATO-led soldiers were killed in separate attacks in southern Afghanistan, while 15 Afghan civilians died in violence elsewhere in the country, officials said Friday. [read story]
- July deadliest month for US troops in Afghanistan
July was the deadliest month for US troops in Afghanistan since the war there started nearly nine years ago, CNN reported Friday. [read story]
- Pakistanis see India as greater threat than Taliban, Al Qaeda
Pakistanis consider India a greater threat than Taliban and Al Qaeda with a quarter viewing Pakistani terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba, blamed for 2008 Mumbai attacks, favourably, according to a new study. [read story]
- British envoy to Pak to be summoned over Cameron's 'terror export' remarks
British High Commissioner to Pakistan, Adam Thomson, is likely to be summoned to the Foreign Office amidst a growing diplomatic spat over British Prime Minister David Cameron's remarks that Pakistan is promoting the 'export of terror' in Afghanistan and around the world. [read story]
|
|
 |
 |
|
|