- publish: 7 January 2016
- time: 10:54 am
- category: Security&Crime
- No: 2894
Taliban expel two dissenting leaders after refusing allegiance to Mansour
The Afghan Taliban have expelled two senior members of the group’s powerful leadership council, or Rehbari Shura as they call it, for their refusal to accept Mullah Akhtar Mansoor as the successor of Mullah Omar.

Mullah Abdul Razzaq and Mullah Hasan Rehmani refused to submit to the leadership of Mullah Mansoor who was elected by a Taliban Shura to succeed Mullah Omar after the news of the elusive leader’s death was confirmed in late July, Express Tribune reported.
Razzaq was the interior minister and Rehmani was governor of Kandahar in the Taliban regime before it was toppled in 2001 by US-led forces.
They were part of a three-member delegation that had met the Afghan High Peace Council in the Chinese city of Urumqi last year. They were among the Taliban leaders who had arrived in Islamabad for a second round of talks with Afghan government officials in July which was, however, cancelled over Mullah Omar’s death.
“As Razzaq and Rehmani had refused to declare allegiance to the Amir-ul-Momineen (commander of the faithful), they have been expelled from the leadership council,” a Taliban leader said. He didn’t wish to be named.
He also disclosed that Mullah Yaqoob, son of Mullah Omar, has been inducted into the new leadership council as the Taliban have almost completed transition. Mullah Omar’s brother, Mullah Abdul Manan, has also been given a position in the political commission, he added. Both Yaqoob and Manan had initially refused to swear allegiance to Mullah Mansoor. However, later they withdrew their opposition to Mullah Mansoor after some Taliban religious scholars brokered a deal.
Mullah Mansoor, who is believed to have strengthened his position, has also formed a two-member committee of senior leaders to woo those leaders who are still opposed to his ascendency, the Taliban leader said. The committee comprises Mullah Mutiullah, also known as Mullah Nanai, Noor-ut Turabi, who had served as justice minister in the Taliban regime. Both were among the most trusted lieutenants of Mullah Omar and are widely respected among the Taliban.
The committee is mainly engaged in talks with Mullah Abdul Qayyum Zakir, who was sacked as the head of the Taliban’s powerful military commission in April 2014 over differences with Mullah Mansoor.