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Mullah Sabir Momin Mullah Sabir Momin Taliban Afghanistan 20040107  
Sabir Momin Sabir Momin Taliban Afghanistan-Pak-India 20051011 Link
  Sabir Momin Taliban Afghanistan/South Asia 20040318  

Afghanistan
Taliban commander sez all is well in Afghanistan
2006-06-05
The Taleban are gaining strength in Afghanistan and are determined to intensify their attacks against foreign and government forces, a Taleban commander said yesterday.

Violence has surged in Afghanistan in recent weeks to its worst since the 2001 overthrow of the hardline Taleban government but the district commander, Mullah Hayat Khan, said the violence was winning the militants more support. "Now the people of Afghanistan are giving full cooperation to us," Khan said in the southwestern Pakistani border town of Chaman.

"There is more anger against foreign forces and their brutality against the people," he said, referring to recent bombing by US forces that he said had killed many civilians.

"The people of Afghanistan have become fed up with Americans," said Khan, who said he was Taleban commander of the Spin Boldak area, in the southern province of Kandahar, opposite Chaman. "They break into houses, arrest people indiscriminately and torture them. These brutalities have increased anger among the people," he said.

"They are providing us shelter. They also lend us their arms and even take part in our jihad (holy war). Even people within the government are cooperating with us."

He said the Taleban were also grooming suicide attackers and vowed there would be more attacks against foreign forces. "At least 40 suicide bombers in my group are ready for attacks. They are all Afghans."

"It is now not very difficult to prepare suicide attackers. In the past, Al Qaeda used to prepare Taleban for suicide attacks but now we have gained expertise. I myself am able to train people," he said.
None of his own family volunteered, however.
He said the Taleban had set up training camps in Helmand and Kandahar provinces, including the Spin Boldak area. "We will continue our jihad until the foreign troops are driven out. We have stepped up attacks and will intensify them."

Khan was appointed commander in Spin Boldak after the killing of his brother, commander Sabir Momin, in February. A short young man with black beard, Khan drove in a pickup truck about 500 metres over the border into Chaman to speak to Reuters. He spoke inside the vehicle, then drove back to Afghanistan. He came without guards. "Pakistan has imposed curbs on mujahideen (holy warriors) because of American pressure. We do come here but covertly. We cannot move freely as we used to," he said.

He rejected Afghan government accusations the Taleban were launching attacks from the safety of Pakistan. "We organise and carry out our operations inside Afghanistan, not in Pakistan. It's just propaganda, but we do get financial help from supporters in Pakistan," he said without elaborating.

Wearing a baggy shalwar kameez tunic and a black turban, the 26-year-old said he was not afraid of death. "It is the path of God. My brother and an uncle laid down their lives on this path and I am also ready to do so."

Khan said he had met Taleban fugitive Taleban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar before the end of Taleban rule in 2001. "Since then, he is in only contact with senior commanders and we get instructions through them," he said. "Mullah Omar is in Afghanistan and is providing full guidance."
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Afghanistan-Pak-India
Pakistani, Chinese hard boyz killed by US troops
2005-10-11
Five militants including one Pakistani and two Chinese nationals were killed in fresh anti-insurgency operations in Afghanistan’s troubled southern zone, where another six people perished in separate bomb explosions on Monday.
I sometimes wonder: Do any Afghans live in the area? Or is it all Paks and Chinese and Chechens and Arabs and Samoans and Lapplanders?
Afghan and US forces shot dead three foreign Taliban insurgents and captured 10 others in a sweep through the Zabul province, said Wazir Mohammad, administrative chief of Shinkay district. Two Taliban fighters were killed and five others wounded in a crackdown jointly carried out by Afghan and coalition forces. Gen Mohammad Sarwar, deputy commander of the Kandahar Military Corps, said the sweep was conducted in Maroof district. Security forces suffered no casualties in the operation, Gen Sarwar said, adding the dead bodies of the combatants were still lying in fields.
"General, sir? Shouldn't we send somebody to police up those bodies? They're startin' to stink!"
"Shovel some manure over 'em. Why waste perfectly good fertilizer?"
The 10 detainees were being grilled, he said.
"Your moustache wax, sir!"
"Thank you, Mahmoud! And which truncheon would you recommend?"
Meanwhile, two suicide explosions in Kandahar killed six people and wounded eight on Monday, officials said. According to officials, a suicide bomber blew himself up in the city centre, killing a senior anti-Taliban commander and three others. Eight people were also hurt in the blast which was followed by a second explosion in which a suicide bomber died on the road leading to the airport when the bomb strapped to his body exploded prematurely, said Kandahar governor Assadullah Kahlid. There were no other casualties, he said.
"I didn't realize this road was so bumpy! I hope this thing doesn't [KABOOM!]"
“Both incidents were the work of Taliban and Al Qaeda suicide bombers,” Khalid said. Among those killed in the first blast was a former senior factional commander, Agha Shah, Kandahar police chief Colonel Mohammad Hakim said. “At least four people, including Agha Shah, lost their lives in the explosion,” Hakim said. Body parts from the victims of the first explosion were strewn on the dusty road outside Shah’s house in a crowded area of Kandahar. Shah was among local commanders who helped US-led forces to overthrow the Taliban government in 2001. A Taliban commander, who identified himself as Sabir Momin, claimed responsibility for the first incident.
Hakimi's successor, I'd venture...
A US military helicopter crashed during an anti-militant operation in Afghanistan, but although the aircraft was a write-off there were no casualties, an American military spokesperson said on Monday.
"Alright! That does it! Next time we're taking the bus!"
"But, sir! You were the pilot!"
Separately, one US soldier was killed and another wounded during an attack by militants in the southern province of Zabul on Sunday, a military statement said. An engine malfunction caused the MH-47 helicopter to crash in the eastern province of Kunar on Thursday, said Tyler Foster, a US military public affairs officer. “The aircraft was returning from dropping troops during an offensive operation,” he said, adding that none of the crew were hurt. Foster did not confirm recent media reports quoting a U.S. official in the United States saying Taliban militants had shot down the Chinook. At the time the Taliban claimed to have shot it down. Foster said an investigation was continuing to determine the cause of the crash.
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Afghanistan-Pak-India
Kandahar suicide boomers kill 6
2005-10-10
Two suicide explosions in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar on Monday killed six people and wounded eight, officials said.

They said a suicide bomber blew himself up in the city center, killing a senior anti-Taliban commander and three others.

Eight people were also hurt in the blast which was followed by a second in which a suicide bomber died on the road leading to the airport when a bomb strapped to his body exploded prematurely, said Kandahar governor Assadullah Kahlid.

There were no other casualties, he said. U.S.-led troops are based at Kandahar airport.

"Both incidents were the work of suicide bombers of Taliban and al Qaeda," Khalid said.

Among the victims killed in the first blast was a former senior factional commander, Agha Shah, Kandahar police chief Colonel Mohammad Hakim said.

"I can say now that at least four people, including Agha Shah, have lost their lives in the explosion," Hakim said.

Body parts from the victims of the first explosion were strewn on the dusty road outside Shah's house in a crowded area of Kandahar.

Shah was among local commanders who helped U.S.-led forces to overthrew the Taliban government in 2001.

A Taliban commander, who identified himself as Sabir Momin, claimed responsibility for the first incident.

There have now been four suicide attacks in less than a week in Kandahar, the Taliban's former stronghold.

On Sunday, four British government officials on a visit to help improve customs services in the restive province were wounded in a suicide attack close to the city center.

Last Wednesday, a suicide bomber and a child were killed when the man detonated explosives in a car near a convoy of Canadian forces near the airport.

Suicide attacks have been rare in Afghanistan compared to those against U.S.-led and Iraqi forces in Iraq, but the Taliban say a number of their "devotees" have infiltrated major cities for suicide missions.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Militants behead three Afghans in south: Official
2004-09-20
Suspected Taleban militants beheaded three Afghan soldiers in the troubled southern province of Zabul over the weekend in the latest pre-election violence, an official said yesterday. Zabul security chief Jailani Khan said the soldiers, who were not in uniform, were travelling in a taxi from Naubahar district to the provincial capital of Qalat when they were stopped by a group of men that included two Pakistanis and an Arab. The three passengers were beheaded in an attack claimed by a breakaway faction of Afghanistan's ousted Taleban militia, which has vowed to step up violence in the runup to a presidential election on October 9. "We have already announced that anyone in the government or aiding the infidels will be killed," said Sabir Momin, a commander of the Taleban Jamiat Jaish-e-Muslimeen (Muslim Army of the Taleban) faction.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Schism widens among the Taliban leadership
2004-08-15
There are signs of the Taliban leadership "falling apart," a U.S. military spokesman said on Saturday, citing reports this week that a breakaway faction no longer recognizes Mullah Mohammad Omar. Reuters reported Monday that a dissident group named Taliban Jamiat Jaish-e-Muslimeen (Muslim Army of the Taliban) had broken away, taking with it about one-third of the Taliban's fighting strength. "That's a significant development which demonstrates the Taliban are falling apart a little bit on the leadership side," Major Scott Nelson told a regular news briefing in Kabul.

Nelson said the military was still assessing what impact the split was having on the Islamist militants' strategy and operations against U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan. "That fissure is widening -- we see that. Specifically what that means we're still looking into it," he said. The new group was being led by Mulla Syed Mohammad Akbar Aga, a 45-year-old commander from the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, Sabir Momin, who was the Taliban's deputy operations commander in southern Afghanistan, told Reuters Monday.
Never interfere when your enemy is in the midst of destroying himself.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
U.S. Sees Widening Crack in Taliban Leadership
2004-08-14
There are signs of the Taliban leadership "falling apart," a U.S. military spokesman said on Saturday, citing reports this week that a breakaway faction no longer recognizes Mullah Mohammad Omar.
I wonder why they don't recognize him? Perhaps Omar lost another eye...
...Reuters reported Monday that a dissident group named Taliban Jamiat Jaish-e-Muslimeen (Muslim Army of the Taliban) had broken away, taking with it about one-third of the Taliban's fighting strength.
First, the Beatles broke up, now the Taliban. What is the world coming to?
The new group was being led by Mulla Syed Mohammad Akbar Aga, a 45-year-old commander from the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, Sabir Momin, who was the Taliban's deputy operations commander in southern Afghanistan, told Reuters Monday.
Don't use that satellite phone any time soon Aga, or your new name might be Mulla Splat.
The rift within the Taliban comes hard on the heels of a series of arrests of al Qaeda members in neighboring Pakistan, suggesting success on two fronts in the U.S.-led war on terror.
The communists columnists at Rooters are finally admitting that we have made some progress. Amazing.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Afghan Taliban Splits, Says Breakaway Commander
2004-08-09
A rift has emerged in the ranks of Afghanistan's ousted Taliban militia, with members of the breakaway faction saying they no longer recognize fugitive leader Mullah Mohammad Omar. Sabir Momin, who was the Taliban's deputy operations commander in southern Afghanistan, said on Monday the dissident group is named Taliban Jamiat Jaish-e-Muslimeen (Muslim Army of the Taliban).
Another faction to add to the hitlist.
Momin told Reuters the faction had the support of about one third of Taliban fighters, and did not recognize the one-eyed Mullah Omar, one of the world's most wanted men for helping shelter Osama bin Laden and his al Qaeda network until late 2001. Momin did not say how many insurgents there were in the Taliban. Momin added that the new group was being led by Mullah Syed Mohammad Akbar Aga, a 45-year-old commander from the southern Afghan city of Kandahar. Mullah Omar is also from Kandahar, the Taliban's stronghold before the hardline Islamic militia was ousted by U.S.-led forces in 2001. Mullah Manzoor, a spokesman for the dissident group, said Omar had lost control of senior military commanders. "The objective of our group is not to weaken the jihad ("holy war"), but to strengthen it," he said. "More groups can also be formed. Our aim is jihad. There will be no let up in our jihadi activities while American forces remain in Afghanistan."
Factions, in-fighting, desention in the ranks, I love good news.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Bad Moslems Executed, Good Moslems Martyred
2004-05-15
From Jihad Unspun. The article is titled, "Taliban Execute Two Government Officials; Five Taliban Martyred"
Taliban Mujahideen used a road block to stop the members of the puppet regime of Karzai and executed two officials from the Kandahar government who were close associates to former governor of Khandahar Gul Agha Sherzai. Both were decapitated. The Taliban Mujahideen escaped the scene without incident. The operation has sent shivers of fear throughout the puppet regime, and American forces have surrounded the area to search for Taliban members. ... Five Taliban Mujahideen have been killed when they attacked a U.S. military convoy in the southern province of Kandahar Wednesday morning in Kotal. Mullah Sabir Momin the Taliban’s deputy commander of operations in the south made the report to Reuters yesterday "The American forces repelled the attack and used heavy weapons in which five of our Taliban were martyred".
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Afghanistan/South Asia
New Taliban chief for southern Afghanistan
2004-03-18
The Taliban has appointed former commander Mullah Dadullah to lead operations against US and Afghan forces in the country’s south, a spokesman for the ousted militia said on Wednesday. The spokesman, identifying himself as Sabir Momin, said Mullah Dadullah’s appointment as operations commander had been “endorsed” by the Taliban’s elusive leader Mullah Mohammad Omar. Momin, speaking from the southern Afghan town of Spin Boldak, told reporters in the bordering Pakistani town of Chaman by telephone that Dadullah’s nomination was proposed by a 10-member Taliban council a few days ago. Mullah Omar himself did not participate in the council meeting but he has approved the nomination of Mullah Dadullah, he said. Dadullah replaces Hafiz Abdul Rahim, who was killed along with his 14 colleagues in a US air raid on the Marouf district of the former Taliban stronghold of Kandahar in December.
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Australian pilot killed in Taliban attack
2004-02-22
An Australian pilot has been killed in Afghanistan after a helicopter was shot down by Taliban fighters. The helicopter belonged to US construction company, the Louis Berger Group, and was forced down by gunfire about 60 kilometres from the southern city of Kandahar. Two passengers on the helicopter are believed to have been injured. Louis Berger Group vice-president Tom Nicastro says the Australian pilot was shot first. "One of two helicopters we have subcontracted for was downed taking off early this morning around Kandahar..." Mr Nicastro said. "The craft came down and other people were wounded."

The BBC reports that a military operation is under way in southern Afghanistan after the civilian helicopter came under fire. A security official in Kandahar says 500 Afghan soldiers along with American forces have surrounded the area and five suspects have been arrested. Louis Berger oversees reconstruction work on the main highway linking Kabul with Kandahar in the south. The route has been plagued by attacks and kidnappings claimed by members of the hardline Islamic Taliban militia ousted from power by US-led forces in late 2001 for sheltering the Al Qaeda network of Osama bin Laden. The rebels claimed responsibility for Sunday’s attack, saying that people on board were spying on the Taliban and using the opening of a school as an excuse to fly over the area. Mullah Sabir Momin, Taliban deputy commander of operations for southern Afghanistan, said: "When the helicopter landed we fired on it with machine guns from two sides. I don’t know how many casualties, but the attackers fled."
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Taliban planning spring offensive
2004-02-13
Gearing up for the "final" battle against US-led forces in Afghanistan, Taliban was regrouping in the Khyber Agency region of Pakistan for the crucial offensive to be mounted in spring under a new commander to recapture major cities, media reports said. "The resistance under a new commander is regrouping in the remote Khyber Agency region of Pakistan, using the infrastructure of people and fortifications laid by Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda several years ago," Hong Kong-based Asia Times online said in a report. Quoting Taliban sources, it said the new commander for the proposed "spring offensive" would be Mullah Sabir Momin of Urugzan province.

Uptil now, Pakistan has aided some commanders in Afghanistan belonging to the Hizb-i-Islami Afghanistan (HIA) of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. "Pakistan’s purpose was not so much to damage the US interests, but to establish a counter-force to the growing pro-India presence along the Afghani border areas with Pakistan," though it worked against the US interests also, the report said. American intelligence agencies "tracked HIA recruiting offices in Pakistani cities such as Karachi and Peshawar and pointed to the various locations in Pakistan where HIA volunteers were being given training, money and arms".

The report said "legendary" Afghan commander Jalaluddin Haqqani - who joined Taliban, became a minister in the erstwhile Afghan regime and is now the "main force" behind the resistance in Khost and Paktia - visited Miran Shah in Pakistan several times, but authorities turned a blind eye". It said that the Taliban would now "step up their struggle to include more suicide attacks" which would be the "prelude to a broader struggle that will start in spring in which the Taliban will attempt to retake the major cities in Afghanistan that they held before being ousted by the US in late 2001".
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Afghanistan
Taliban Sorry for ’Mistake’ That Killed 16 Afghans
2004-01-07
Afghanistan’s ousted Taliban apologized Wednesday for a bomb attack in the southern city of Kandahar that killed 16 people, including many children, and called it a botched attempt to target U.S. troops. The ousted Islamic militia initially denied involvement in Tuesday’s explosion near a military compound as children were passing on their way home from school.
"Wasn’t us, must have been somebody else."
"It was a mistake by our mujahideen (holy warriors)," senior Taliban commander Mullah Sabir Momin said by satellite telephone. "We wanted to target the Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) office in the city, but because of a small mistake, this plan failed," he told Reuters.
"Well, ok, it was us. We bad, sorry."
Momin said U.S. and allied forces regularly passed along the route where the explosion occurred.
"How dare they not walk into our ambush!"
One person was arrested by Afghan authorities shortly after the blast, but Momin said he did not know the individual and that Taliban guerrillas had got away on motorcycles.
I think they ought to stop and search every damm motorcycle rider in the country.
He urged residents of the dusty, bleak former Taliban stronghold to stay away from buildings belonging to U.S. or Afghan forces, adding that they would soon be attacked.
"We’ll be back"
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