Saturday, November 2, 2013

Afghan Taliban condemn Hakimullah Mehsud's killing


Kabul: The Afghan Taliban on Saturday portrayed the killing of Pakistani Taliban head Hakimullah Mehsud as "an enormous misfortune" and urged Islamabad to forestall any further Us ramble strikes. Mehsud, who was under
a $5 million Us government abundance, was slaughtered when an automaton focused on his auto in the North Waziristan tribal area of Pakistan, close to the Afghan outskirt. "The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan firmly censures this fear gesture by America and depicts the affliction of Mullah Hakimullah Mehsud as an enormous misfortune," the Taliban said in a proclamation, utilizing the gathering's formal name. "America can not make a vacuum or attain their underhanded objectives by martyring mujahideen." "The Islamic Emirate approaches the Pakistani individuals and government to attempt than at whatever available opportunity to avert such ruthless ambushes by the American intruders," said the articulation. Haqqani arrange promises to vindicate Us In the mean time, an agent of al Qaeda and Afghan Taliban-upheld Haqqani Network pledged to vindicate the Us for killing Hakimullah Mehsud. Addressing Dawn.com from an undisclosed area, Ahmed Yousuf said the Us was not battling with the Taliban, however indeed, he included "it was pursuing a war against Muslims and the Islam." The United States accuses the Haqqani system, a faction of the Taliban pursuing a 12-year uprising in Afghanistan, for an arrangement of high-profile ambushes lately. The aggressor outfit was established by Jalaluddin Haqqani, a mujahideen pioneer against Soviet troops in Afghanistan in the 1980s who is currently based with his family in Pakistan. Haqqani is near al Qaeda and his warriors are animated crosswise over east and southeastern Afghanistan and in Kabul. – with extra reporting by Zahir Shah

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