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Afghan Taliban take apparent dig at IS over Hazara killings

By AFP
07 September 2015   |   10:02 am
The Taliban have condemned the killing of 13 minority Shiites as a plot to "breed fault lines", in an apparent dig at the rival Islamic State group making gradual inroads into Afghanistan. Gunmen on Saturday shot dead 13 Hazaras after dragging them out of their vehicles in the usually tranquil northern Balkh province, in a…
Pakistani Taliban

Pakistani Taliban

The Taliban have condemned the killing of 13 minority Shiites as a plot to “breed fault lines”, in an apparent dig at the rival Islamic State group making gradual inroads into Afghanistan.

Gunmen on Saturday shot dead 13 Hazaras after dragging them out of their vehicles in the usually tranquil northern Balkh province, in a rare fatal attack targeting ethnic minorities.

No group has so far claimed responsibility for the attack.

IS, observers say, have struggled to gain a firm foothold in Afghanistan because of the lack of a deeply sectarian environment — unlike Syria and Iraq where the group has captured large swathes of territory.

“These acts are being perpetrated to breed fault lines, intolerance and discrimination,” the Taliban said referring to Saturday’s attack, without naming IS.

“We strongly condemn this incident… (and) call on our nation to be vigilant of all enemy plots,” said the statement posted on their website on Sunday.

Ethnic Hazaras, Shiite minorities in Afghanistan, suffered extensively under the Sunni Taliban’s 1996-2001 regime.

Attacks targeting the sect in Afghanistan are not unheard of, but rare compared to neighbouring Pakistan.

“If indeed IS are behind this attack, it shows their sinister attempt to inflame sectarian tensions to seek a firmer foothold in the country,” Kabul-based military analyst Jawed Kohistani told AFP.

IS has been trying for months to establish itself in Afghanistan’s eastern badlands, challenging the Taliban on their own turf.

Its franchise in the war-torn country has managed to recruit some disaffected Taliban fighters, as the fractious Afghan militant movement wrestles with a bitter power transition.

But the loss of senior commanders in drone strikes and the group’s signature brutality, which repels many Afghans, has helped stem its advance.

Frequent clashes and firefights with Taliban insurgents have also hampered its bid to capture significant territory.

The Taliban, who have themselves often been accused of savagery during their 14-year insurgency, are seeking to appear as a bulwark against IS’s rein of brutality and as a legitimate group waging an Islamic war.

The Taliban recently condemned a “horrific” video that apparently showed IS fighters blowing up bound and blindfolded Afghan prisoners with explosives, spotlighting the growing rivalry between the two groups.

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