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Afghan seeks to establish fate of 'injured' Taliban chief

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AFP Kandahar
Afghan officials scrambled today to establish whether Taliban supremo Mullah Akhtar Mansoor was still alive, after sources said he was "critically" wounded in a firefight following a bitter argument with commanders in the divided militant movement.

It remains unclear whether Mansoor survived the gunfight, which threatens to derail a renewed regional push to jump-start peace talks with the Taliban.

The clash broke out just four months after Mansoor was appointed Taliban leader in an acrimonious leadership succession soon after the group belatedly confirmed longtime chief Mullah Omar's death.

The Taliban officially rejected as "absolutely baseless" the reports of the firefight, which officials and militant sources said was triggered by an altercation at an insurgent gathering that cascaded out of control.
 

"We are trying to establish whether Mansoor is dead or alive," said Sultan Faizi, the spokesman for the Afghan first vice president.

"His situation is critical," Faizi said, citing credible information.

A senior Pakistani intelligence official told AFP that Mansoor had been "very seriously injured" in what he described as a "heavy exchange of fire" at a gathering of militant commanders near the Pakistani city of Quetta.

An Afghan intelligence official and multiple insurgent sources close to Mansoor's group confirmed the account to AFP, adding that the gunfight left at least four Taliban members dead and several others wounded.

The firefight exposes deepening divisions within the fractious militant movement, which saw its first formal split last month after a breakaway faction surfaced.

The rifts increase the risk of internecine clashes within the Taliban, which has lately seen a new resurgence under Mansoor even as it confronts the rise of the rival Islamic State group in Afghanistan.

There was conflicting information on the location of the confrontation, with some sources claiming that it took place near the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, the spiritual birthplace of the Taliban.

But they all agreed the meeting was at the home of Abdullah Sarhadi, a commander in Mansoor's group and a former Guantanamo Bay detainee.

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First Published: Dec 03 2015 | 10:07 PM IST

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