CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: DR. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

World / Asia

Zawahiri backs new Taliban chief

Published: 14 Aug 2015 - 12:25 am | Last Updated: 01 Nov 2021 - 05:06 pm
Peninsula

Ayman Al Zawahiri

Dubai: Al Qaeda leader Ayman Al Zawahiri yesterday pledged his group’s allegiance to new Taliban chief Mullah Akhtar Mansour who is facing a bitter struggle over his leadership.
Mansour, a trusted deputy of longtime Taliban leader Mullah Omar whose death was confirmed last month, is taking charge as the movement faces growing internal divisions and is threatened by the rise of the Islamic State (IS) group making inroads in Afghanistan.
Al Zawahiri’s declaration comes with Al Qaeda facing a growing rivalry for global jihadist pre-eminence with IS, which has seized control of large parts of Syria and Iraq.
“As emir of Al Qaeda, I pledge to you our allegiance, following the path of Sheikh (Osama) bin Laden and his martyred brothers in their allegiance to Mullah Omar,” Al Zawahiri said, referring to the late Al Qaeda leader.
The recording was featured in a video that opens with images of Bin Laden — who was killed by US special forces in Pakistan in 2011 — pledging allegiance to Omar. The recording then plays over a picture of Al Zawahiri, believed to be in hiding in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region.
He says the “Islamic emirate” established by the Taliban in Afghanistan was the “first legitimate emirate after the fall of the Ottoman Empire, and there is no legitimate emirate in the world apart from it.”
He stated his opposition to any regime or organisation, including Muslim ones, that oppose Shariah law he promised to implement.
And he pledged to continue “jihad until every part of occupied Muslim land is free”. Mansour was announced as the new Taliban chief on July 31, after the movement confirmed the death of Omar, who led the Islamist movement for some two decades.
But splits have emerged in the Taliban following the appointment, with some top leaders, including Omar’s son and brother, refusing to pledge allegiance to Mansour. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid acknowledged the news of Al Zawahiri’s pledge of allegiance, but said: “We will react about it later... We don’t want to comment on it now.”
Pakistani analyst Imtiaz Gul, an expert on Al Qaeda and the Taliban, said: “Al Zawahiri’s announcement is logical and true to the Islamic tradition of governance and succession, which is to say that whoever commands the majority of the Taliban should rightfully be the successor.
“This is in keeping with their political ideology. These organisations contest the idea of hereditary succession,” he added.
Two days after the succession announcement, the late leader’s son Mullah Yakoub and his brother Mullah Abdul Manan refused to pledge allegiance to Mansour, calling on religious scholars to settle the rift.
Yakoub and several other members of the Taliban’s ruling council walked out of the meeting at which Mansour was declared leader, refusing to pledge loyalty to him. 

AFP