The Asian Age

Jalaluddin, Haqqani network founder, dies

■ Afghan Taliban announces his death after ‘ long illness’

- THE ASIAN AGE

Kabul, Sept. 4: Jalaluddin Haqqani, a one- time CIA asset who went on to found a brutal militant group that is now a top US target in South Asia, has died after a long illness, the Afghan Taliban announced Tuesday.

Jalaluddin, whose eponymous Haqqani network is known for its heavy use of suicide bombers against Afghan civilians, security forces, and US- led NATO troops, was a key figure in entrenchin­g jihad in the conflict- ridden region over the past 40 years.

His group is at the heart of regional tensions, with Washington and Kabul long suspecting the Haqqanis of having links to Pakistan's shadowy military establishm­ent.

Jalaluddin, believed to have been born in Afghanista­n before migrating to Pakistan's ■ tribal areas, first came to prominence as an Afghan mujahideen commander fighting the Soviet occupation in the 1980s with the help of the United States and Pakistan.

Known for his organisati­on, courage and entreprene­urial skills, Jalaluddin was nicknamed “kabari”, Pashto for scrap metal dealer, for reselling parts of tanks that had been destroyed on the battlefiel­d.

He became a CIA asset and received a personal visit from US congressma­n Charlie Wilson, who helped secure arms for the mujahideen.

Over the following decades, the media- friendly Jalaluddin used his Arabic language skills to foster close ties with Arab jihadists, including Osama bin Laden. He became a minister in the Taliban regime which took power in Afghanista­n in 1996, one of the only major mujahideen leaders to join the group.

But after the US invasion in 2001 toppled the regime, he pulled back from the public eye, making only a handful of appearance­s in later years as the fearsome reputation of the Haqqani network began to grow.

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