Experts warn of differences within Afghan Taliban leadership as interior minister issues public criticism

This file photo taken on April 28, 2022, shows Taliban Interior Minister Sirajuddin Haqqani speaking during a ceremony in Kabul. (Photo courtesy: AFP/File)
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Updated 13 February 2023
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Experts warn of differences within Afghan Taliban leadership as interior minister issues public criticism

  • Acting Interior Minister Sirajuddin Haqqani is in the spotlight following a public critical comment on current situation in Afghanistan
  • Minister’s remarks prompted a response from Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid, who said criticism should be told in private

KABUL: Major differences have emerged within the Taliban leadership in Afghanistan, experts said on Monday, after a senior official described the country’s situation as “intolerable” over the weekend.

Acting Interior Minister Sirajuddin Haqqani is in the spotlight following a critical comment on the current situation in Afghanistan during a public event on Saturday.

“The current situation is intolerable. If the public situation becomes worse and unstable, it is our responsibility to bring them closer to us,” Haqqani said.

The statement comes as Afghanistan struggles with humanitarian and economic crises that have left millions without lifesaving support. It also follows increasingly restrictive edicts targeting women that are seen as further isolating the country from the international community.

The minister’s remarks also prompted a response from Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid, who said that criticism of any leader or official should be told in private.

The latest developments, experts said, showed how the Taliban, who took control of the country in 2021, are facing major differences within their leadership.

The Taliban are divided into two factions, said Hamza Momain Hakimi, a political science lecturer at the Salam University in Kabul.

One faction comprises a minority but powerful members, who hold powerful positions in Afghanistan and “imposing their own narrow narrative from Islam,” Hakimi told Arab News.

The other faction represents a vast majority, he said, which refuses the minority opinion on many issues, including women’s role in Afghan society and policies related to their work and education.

“Such statement from powerful people like Sirajuddin Haqqani shows clearly that there are fractions between Taliban and there is a majority and there is a minority,” Hakimi added. “But unfortunately, that minority is more powerful than the majority.”

Haqqani’s remarks also conveyed the concerns of the Afghan people, said Mohibullah Sharif, an Afghan political expert based in Kabul.

“Those are words and meanings that express what the Afghan people want,” Sharif told Arab News. “There is no doubt that there was a clear difference in the Islamic and political view of the leaders of the Taliban movement and currently among the leading personalities of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.”

Experts say these emerging differences might pave way for an internal conflict.

“The Afghan people want these differences between the leading personalities to end easily and safely, because the problems between them will lead to a serious conflict in the country and Afghanistan will return to the civil war that occurred in the ‘90s,” Sharif said.

Sayed Baheir Sadat, an Afghan expert based in Germany, said the division in Taliban is a big problem for the group and could potentially increase.

“This would again be the chance of internal war between Afghans,” Sadat told Arab News.

“If the Taliban want to take over the government and the people, they should engage themselves with internal and international standards, so that the world’s support can be found with them,” Sadat added. “Otherwise, it will collapse soon.”


Rohingya ‘targeted for destruction’ by Myanmar, Gambia tells ICJ

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Rohingya ‘targeted for destruction’ by Myanmar, Gambia tells ICJ

THE HAGUE: Myanmar's military deliberately targeted the Rohingya minority in a bid to destroy the community, Gambia's Justice Minister Dawda Jallow told the International Court of Justice on Monday.
"It is not about esoteric issues of international law. It is about real people, real stories and a real group of human beings. The Rohingya of Myanmar. They have been targeted for destruction," Jallow told ICJ judges.
Gambia has dragged Myanmar before the ICJ, claiming its 2017 crackdown against the Rohingya minority was in breach of the 1948 UN Genocide Convention.