Mullah Dadullah, the Taliban's top operational commander in
southern
Afghanistan, was
killed during a clash with Afghan and western forces in Helmand
province, Afghan officials said yesterday.
The death of Dadullah represents the biggest setback to the
Taliban command since the insurgency began, after its Islamic
militia government was toppled by US backed forces in 2001.
"He was killed last night and right now I have his body before
me," said Assadullah Khalid, governor of neighboring Kandahar
province.
An Interior Ministry statement said Dadullah was killed in
fighting with security forces in Helmand's Girishk district on
Saturday night. Officials from NATO and the US-led coalition could
not confirm it.
The one-legged Dadullah has been reported to have been captured
or killed several times in the past, but this time the authorities
appeared sure he was dead.
A reporter who had seen Dadullah in the past recognized the body
brought to Kandahar.
The bearded face was pale and splattered with blood, and he
appeared to have suffered a head wound.
Placed on a stretcher, the corpse was partially covered with a
purple cloth. The left leg was missing.
A senior Pakistani security official, who requested anonymity,
gave a different version, saying Dadullah was killed on Friday
night in an airstrike. But an Afghan intelligence official said
that was incorrect, and Dadullah died from wounds rather than being
blown to pieces by a bomb or missile strike.
"His body is intact," the Afghan official said.
Savage reputation
Dadullah was a member of Taliban's 10 member leadership council
and close to the movement's fugitive leader, Mullah Mohammad
Omar.
"It's the biggest setback to the Taliban since they started
resistance in 2001," said Rahimullah Yusufzai, a Peshawar based
journalist and expert on tribal affairs in the Pashtun lands
straddling the Pakistan-Afghan border where the Taliban
operate.
"They can take revenge for the killing. They can become more
brutal. There may be more reprisal attacks. But it is clear that
for now, at least, that there is no one who can replace him,"
Yusufzai said.
"He was an inspirational and daring commander. I don't see any
person of his standing in the Taliban hierarchy."
Apart from leading most Taliban attacks in the south, Dadullah's
savagery earned him the sobriquet of Afghanistan's Al-Zarqawi,
after the Al-Qaida leader in Iraq who was killed last year.
Dadullah was believed to be behind a campaign of suicide
bombings and a series of kidnappings of foreigners and Afghans and
beheadings of hostages or collaborators.
"His claim to fame was suicide bombings," a senior Pakistani
security official said, adding that Dadullah had been a frequent
visitor to Waziristan, a Pakistan tribal region regarded as a
hotbed of support for the Taliban.
In December, US-led forces killed another top Taliban official,
Mullah Mohammad Akhtar Osmani, in an air attack in the south of the
country after a tip-off by Pakistan.
"They have now knocked out two senior military commanders. This
is a very serious blow to the Taliban," the Pakistani officer
said.
(China Daily May 14, 2007)