Kabul, Afghanistan – Ex-Afghan President Killed By Suicide Bomber With Explosives In Turban

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    FILE - This Friday, Nov. 23, 2001 file photo shows former Afghan President Burhanuddin Rabbani as he emerges from the Pul-e-Khishti mosque after Friday prayers, surrounded by United Front bodyguards and supporters, in the capital Kabul, Afghanistan. A Kabul police official said Tuesday Sept. 20, 2011 that former Afghan President Burhanuddin Rabbani was killed by a suicide bomber who had explosives in his turban. A presidential spokesman says Afghan President Hamid Karzai is cutting short his trip to the United Nations in New York to return to Kabul. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)Kabul, Afghanistan – Former Afghan President Burhanuddin Rabbani, who headed a government peace council set up to facilitate contacts with Taliban insurgents, was assassinated Tuesday by a suicide bomber concealing explosives in his turban, officials said. Four of Rabbani’s bodyguards also died and a key presidential adviser was wounded.

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    President Hamid Karzai cut short a visit to the U.S. over the attack, which dealt a harsh blow to peace efforts after a decade of war.

    The turban bomber entered Rabbani’s house in the capital Kabul on Tuesday evening and blew himself up inside, said Mohammad Zahir, the chief of criminal investigation for the Kabul police.

    Rabbani headed the country’s High Peace Council, which was set up by the Afghan government to work toward a political solution to the decade-long war. However, it had made little headway since it was formed a year ago.

    Rabbani was president of the Afghan government that preceded the Taliban rule. After he was driven from Kabul in 1996, he became the nominal head of the Northern Alliance, mostly minority Tajiks and Uzbeks, who swept to power in Kabul after the Taliban’s fall. Rabbani is an ethnic Tajik.

    His killing dampens hopes of starting peace negotiations with Taliban insurgents and also will hamper efforts to keep regional and ethnic rivalries, which feed the insurgency, in check.

    As one of the wise old man of Afghan politics and the leader of the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance, Rabanni’s role in the attempts to reach out to the Taliban and seeking a political deal with them — with the U.S. blessing — will be hard to replicate in the near future.

    His death could unleash a well of resentment building up among some senior Northern Alliance members, who accuse President Hamid Karzai of colluding with the Taliban.

    Already Afghanistan’s ethnic minorities have begun to re-arm in the face of negotiations with the Taliban. Rabbani’s death is likely to accelerate the re-arming and lay the foundation for a bitter civil war once U.S. troops leave the country in 2014.

    Karzai’s adviser Mohammad Masoom Stanekzai was wounded in the attack. A relative who answered Stanekzai’s phone said that the wounds did not appear to be life-threatening, but Stanekzai was in the hospital. The relative declined to give his name because of the sensitivity of the situation

    Stanekzai is chief executive of the Afghanistan Peace and Reintegration Program, a highly touted program funded by the U.S. and its coalition allies to bring mid- and lower-level Taliban back into Afghan society. The program has so far only managed to reintegrated about 2,000 of the estimated 25,000-40,000 insurgents in Afghanistan.

    Reintegration was the other half of reconciliation, which is aims to try and broker a peace deal with the senior Taliban leadership.


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    4 Comments
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    eighthcomment
    eighthcomment
    12 years ago

    The Pereh Adam is an animalistic human who cannot be domesticated

    toolee
    toolee
    12 years ago

    In his TURBAN? big deal, another HOT HEAD Arab.

    Floridian
    Floridian
    12 years ago

    Now lets see if the TSA really has the GUTS to make all Turban wearing objects remove it when passing through security check points at the airports just like You & I have to remove our shoes

    SherryTheNoahide
    SherryTheNoahide
    12 years ago

    Wow. I can’t believe some of the comments on here about an “ANTI-Taliban” leader who has just been assassinated!

    We are supposed to WANT Arab leaders like this to be in control in the newly-forming Arab states, or it will only spell *more* trouble for Israel if they are not!

    I mean, what other kinds of leaders *should* we want them to have, if not ones who want to make peace & are against war & bombings, etc? How are we ever supposed to join hands in one accord & see the 3rd Temple get built… if we can’t even get a dialogue started??

    I’m not suggesting we all need to weep & cry & lose sleep, when we see something like this happen. None of us knew this man, and if we’re being honest, we’d have to admit we don’t feel anything too personal about his death.

    After all, we all know plenty of Israelis have died by the hands of suicide bombers as well…

    But I don’t think we’re supposed to be “dancing a jig” about it, or saying “Oh well!” and “Big Deal!” either, or chasveshalom these kinds of tragedies could befall one of us or a loved one!

    And I can guarantee it will be a “big deal” then!

    I don’t pretend to have all the answers, but I know we’ve got to *try* to be righteous.