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--------------------------------------------
Taliban appears to be regrouped and well-funded
Christian Science Monitor
 
Affirms Taliban's Resurgence
uploaded 09 May 2003
Source: CS Monitor
[Excerpted: Propaganda material inserted in the 
article has been deleted. 
Only factual aspects are retained.]
A new hierarchy of leaders has emerged across 
parts of 
Afghanistan.................
Justice Salam is back, talking to a foreign 
reporter for the first time 
since the Taliban fell a year and a half ago, but 
he says the Taliban are 
back as well. Regrouped, rearmed, and 
well-funded, they are ready to carry on 
guerrilla war as long as it takes to expel 
US 
forces from Afghanistan.
It's what Afghans want, "because during the 
Taliban times, there was peace 
and security," says Salam, who retains the long 
gray beard that marks him as 
a devout Muslim.
Across the southern portions of Afghanistan, 
where the Taliban found strong 
support among the rural conservative Pashtun 
populations, there are definite 
signs that the Taliban are making a comeback. 
Some Taliban leaders, such as 
Salam and Taliban commander Mullah Muhammad Hasan 
Rehmani, are giving 
interviews once again. Others are dropping 
leaflets, calling for a 
jihad 
against US forces and against the new Afghan 
government of President Hamid 
Karzai. Still others are increasingly willing to 
discuss the secret hierarchy 
that is directing this jihad and the sources of 
funding that keep it running.
It's this confidence that undercuts recent 
assertions by US Defense Secretary 
Donald Rumsfeld that major combat operations in 
Afghanistan are over, and 
that the focus will now be on reconstruction. 
"The general idea that was 
being put forward by Secretary of Defense 
Rumsfeld last week, is that the 
Afghan military, backed by US forces, is engaged 
in mopping up some remnants 
of the past
The reorganized Taliban are mounting increasingly 
brazen attacks on Afghan 
soil. In Zabul Province last month, for instance, 
Taliban forces took control 
of two remote districts near the 
Pakistani 
border 
for nearly a week. Afghan 
military forces, backed up by US Special Forces 
and helicopter gunships, 
eventually dislodged the Taliban fighters.
New hierarchy emerges
Taliban sources in Pakistan and Afghan 
intelligence sources say that the 
Taliban now has a recognizable hierarchy of 
leaders - some operating from 
Afghanistan and some from the Pashtun tribal 
areas of Pakistan's volatile 
Northwest Frontier Province.
At the top of the military command structure is 
Mullah Beradar, who hails 
from Deh Rawood in Urozgan, the home village of 
former supreme Taliban leader 
Mullah Omar. Underneath Mullah Beradar are a 
number of Taliban commanders and 
religious leaders assigned to different 
territories.
The most active region - from Nimroz Province to 
Helmand, on up to Kandahar, 
Zabul, and north to Urozgan - is under the joint 
control of Beradar's top 
three deputies. Akhtar Usmani was the Taliban 
corps commander in Kandahar. 
Mullah Abdur Razzaq was the Taliban Interior 
Minister. And Mullah Dadullah 
was the military chief in the northern city of 
Kunduz, on the front lines 
against the Northern Alliance when the Taliban 
lines crumbled.
The Taliban has commanders all across the 
country. In Paktia, Paktika, Khost, 
and Ghazni provinces, Mullah Saifur Rehman is in 
charge. He was the commander 
of Taliban forces during the US coalition's 
indecisive battle, Operation 
Anaconda, in the Shah-e Kot mountains.
In Nangrahar, Laghman, and Konar provinces, the 
Taliban's former deputy prime 
minister, Mullah Kabir, is supreme commander, 
working along with activists of 
the Hizb-i Islami.
Anwar Panghaz commands the Taliban guerrillas 
operating in the provinces that 
ring the capital city of Kabul - Parwan, Kapisa, 
Kabul, Wardak, and Logar. 
Afghan security officials say that operations 
there have been light in recent 
months.
Salam, who lives in his native Logar Province, 
neighboring Kabul, refuses to 
talk about his own activities in the Taliban 
today. Days after the Taliban 
fell, Northern Alliance troops surrounded his 
home, but eventually left 
without explanation. Salam has remained free 
since and admits that he 
maintains contact with the Taliban movement.
Salam says Afghans would prefer to rely on their 
own resources, even if the 
jihad takes years or decades. "We don't want the 
interference of foreign 
countries like Russia, Iran, and Pakistan. We 
want Afghan people to be united 
and select their leaders. We want Afghanistan to 
solve its problems through 
discussion."
But there is no use discussing peace when the 
US-led military coalition 
continues to patrol Afghan territory, he adds. 
"The last loya jirga [national 
council] was done by force," says Salam, pointing 
a finger to his head like a 
gun. "But if there was a real loya jirga, and the 
people who were appointed 
were good, then I would work with my head and 
feet and heart for my country."
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HIZBUT TAHRIR FACES TORTURE UNDER UZBEKISTAN'S 
STALINIST REGIME
U.S. SUPPORTS STALINISTS BECAUSE THEY ARE 
ANTI-ISLAM
uploaded 09 May 2003
Source: BBC Monitoring
Uzbekistan: four jailed on charges of links to 
Hizb-ut-Tahrir
Text of report 
by banned Muslim Uzbekistan web site on 6 May
According to a report by Radio Liberty, sentences 
were recently passed on 
four people charged with involvement in Hezb-e 
Tahrir banned religious 
movement . According to the report, Rasul 
Ismoilov, 27, and Umrzoq Gadoyev, 
28, were given 10 years in jail. Bahriddin 
Kholiqov, 24, was sentenced to six 
years in prison. One more accused, Nihoyat 
Karimova, 28, a mother of four, 
was put on probation for three years.
On 16 January 2003 Bahriddin Kholiqov, Umrzoq 
Gadoyev, Sirojiddin Ahmedov, 
Samariddin Ahmedov, Jamshid Khudoyberdiyev, Akmal 
Sharipov, Rasul Ismoilov 
and Nihoyat Karimova were detained by regional 
security service officers. 
Five of them were set free on 24 January.
Sharofiddin Kholiqov, who is a relative of one of 
those accused, Bahriddin 
Kholiqov, said the investigation had been 
conducted without lawyers present. 
The lawyers recommended by the defendants' 
relatives were rejected by the 
court in contravention of the law. In an 
interview with a radio 
correspondent, he said that the defendants had 
been subjected to torture
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ATTACK ON 
ISRAEL 
Is a CRIME AGAINST U.K.?
Women in Mujahid's family Family Brought to Court
[Resistance to occupation is an internationally 
recognized right. Is Blair's 
England the same as Israel?]
May 09, 2003
Source: 
Albawaba.com
Three relatives of a Briton wanted for a suicide 
bomb attack in Israel are 
appearing Friday in a London court charged in 
connection with the blast. 
According to Sky News, the wife, brother and 
sister of Omar Sharif, 27, were 
arrested in Derbyshire under anti-terrorism laws.
Israeli authorities said Sharif, from Derby, is 
on the run after trying to 
blow himself up in the attack on a Tel Aviv bar 
about ten days ago. Three 
people were killed when another Briton, Asif 
Muhammad Hanif, 21, from London, 
detonated explosives strapped to his body.
Sharif's wife Tahari Shad Tabussum, 27, brother 
Zahid Hussain Sharif, 46, and 
sister Paveen Sharif, 35, are appearing at Bow 
Street magistrates court. They 
are charged under anti-terrorist laws relating to 
the failure to disclose 
information about acts of "terrorism."
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2003-05-10 Sat 17:37ct