Taliban declares 'attack on Pakistan is not jihad': Afghan diplomat

Taliban declares attack on Pakistan is not jihad: Afghan diplomat
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A top Afghan diplomat said on Wednesday that the Islamic Emirate -- or the Taliban administration -- had already issued a fatwa (decree) that launching attacks in Pakistan is not "jihad" (holy war), the media reported.

Peshawar: A top Afghan diplomat said on Wednesday that the Islamic Emirate -- or the Taliban administration -- had already issued a fatwa (decree) that launching attacks in Pakistan is not "jihad" (holy war), the media reported.

Hafiz Mohibullah Shakir, the acting consul general at the Afghan Consulate in Peshawar, told Geo News that the neighbouring country's Defence Ministry had also made it clear that attacking Pakistan did not fall under jihad.

In his conversation with Geo News, Shakir said the TTP militants had migrated to Afghanistan during former US-backed Afghan president Ashraf Ghani's tenure — 2014-2021. He was overthrown by the Taliban.

"I want to make it clear: No attacks will be launched from Afghanistan on Pakistan," the envoy added, Geo News reported.

The Pakistani government has time and again stressed that Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) terrorists have safe havens in Afghanistan and that the neighbouring nation's soil was being used for attacks on Pakistan.

Since the Afghan Taliban took over the reins of government in 2021, Pakistan has witnessed a rise in terror incidents with 2023 being the deadliest in eight years, despite months left in its conclusion, with officials also saying that Afghan nationals were involved in attacks on security forces.

Asif Durrani, Pakistan's special representative on Afghanistan, said that the banned TTP’s attacks on Pakistan along the borders have increased and that they were "taking shelter on the Afghan soil".

In response to Pakistan's repeated insistence on taking action, the interim Afghan rulers arrested 200 suspected militants involved in attacks against Pakistan, Voice of America reported last month, citing Pakistani officials privy to the development.

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