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[Courtesy Afghanistan List.]
Senior Taliban leader resurfaces, vows jihad
"Karzai is an American clerk"
 
SPIN BOLDAK, Afghanistan, May 4 (Reuters) - One 
of the most senior 
leaders of Afghanistan's ousted Taliban regime 
vowed on Sunday to 
continue a jihad against the 
United States 
and 
its Afghan 
allies.
 
Mullah Mohammad Hasan Rehmani, former governor of 
the province of 
Kandahar and a close associate of Taliban leader 
Mullah Mohammad Omar, 
was speaking to Reuters by satellite telephone 
from an undisclosed 
location in his first interview since the fall of 
the Taliban in late 
2001.
 
"The Taliban will continue their jihad and 
struggle for peace, 
implementation of Islamic sharia law, and against 
America and its 
agents," Rehmani said. "The jihad will continue 
because American troops 
are occupying Afghanistan."
 
Afghan officials say the Taliban appears to be 
regrouping this year and 
blame the hardline militia for a series of 
attacks on American and 
Afghan government troops in recent months.
 
Afghan government officials say Rehmani fled to 
Pakistan with many other 
senior Taliban leaders after the movement was 
ousted, but he has kept a 
very low profile since then.
 
A founder member of the fundamentalist militia, 
he is perhaps the most 
senior Taliban leader to have spoken publicly 
since the regime fell. 
Observers say his re-emergence may be a sign of 
the Taliban's growing 
confidence.
Rehmani also denounced Afghan President Hamid 
Karzai as an American 
stooge and a puppet of the powerful Northern 
Alliance faction which 
played a leading role in the Taliban's ouster.
 
"Right now Hamid Karzai's position is not that of 
a president but that 
of an American clerk and a toy in the hands of 
the Northern Alliance," 
Rehmani said.
 
"We invite Hamid Karzai to seek forgiveness for 
his sins from Allah, 
like a true Muslim, and by joining the Taliban 
movement prove that he is 
a Muslim," he added.
 
ADVISER TO MULLAH OMAR
A senior Afghan government official described 
Rehmani as a prominent 
Taliban leader, and someone who had links with 
Osama bin Laden's al 
Qaeda network, blamed for the 
September 11, 2001 
attacks on the United 
States.
 
"He was part of the leadership, high-ranking, a 
trusted adviser to 
Mullah Omar," the official said. "As governor of 
Kandahar, he also had a 
lot of meetings with al Qaeda."
 
Kandahar was the Taliban's spiritual home and the 
base for its most 
senior leaders during the fundamentalist regime's 
five-year rule.
 
Rehmani lost a leg in a landmine explosion during 
the struggle against 
Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s.
 
There are more than 11,000 U.S. and allied troops 
in Afghanistan hunting 
for Taliban and al Qaeda militants, although the 
whereabouts of Mullah 
Omar and al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden remain a 
mystery.
 
The Afghan government says many senior members of 
the Taliban are hiding 
in 
Pakistan 
and directing the resistance from 
there. Karzai visited 
Islamabad last month to ask for more Pakistani 
help in tracking them 
down.
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2003-05-05 Mon 19:13ct