Mullah omar where is he




















Taliban admit covering up Mullah Omar's death. Image source, EPA. The Taliban leader remained a key figurehead despite not having day-to-day involvement. Who are the Taliban? Other key findings in the book:. The author, independent Dutch journalist Bette Dam, worked from Kabul from to Her biography on Omar, Searching for an Enemy, was published in Dutch last month. In an article published in English by a think-tank named Zomia, Dam summarises the book.

Describing how the US portrayed Omar as a terrorist mastermind working from Pakistan, Dam refers to an internal US military log disclosed by WikiLeaks that claims Omar frequently distributed funds to movement figures and met regularly with Osama bin Laden.

Omar disappeared from public view in After that, Dam writes, Omar never set foot in Pakistan, instead opting to hide in Afghanistan itself. Based on this and information from other sources, Dam writes that Mullah Omar spent the remainder of his life in a pair of small villages in the remote, mountainous province of Zabul. On December 7, Omar reportedly left Kandahar for Qalat, the provincial capital of Zabul, miles from Kandahar city.

The US intelligence community assesses that the Taliban leader Mullah Omar is dead, although the circumstances of his death are not clear. Have you read these stories? China in talking closely with US for virtual summit. ET NOW. Brand Solutions. Video series featuring innovators. ET Financial Inclusion Summit. The area was very much pro-Taliban. They were not looking for Mullah Omar, because they were busy surviving and, at the same time, interviews with soldiers from FOB Wolverine gave me the impression that they suffered from tunnel vision by maintaining that Mullah Omar was in Pakistan.

Dam: Until now, I have not been able to travel to the hamlet where Mullah Omar lived for eight years and eventually died. There is only one road to the place, which means if I take it and walk around in the village, people who may want to do me harm know I would have to take that same road back. It was too risky, according to my Afghan colleagues. But Omari refused to share the details, and also the villagers are silent.

Dam: I tried, but they refused to comment. With that, they kept parts of the war going, which I find problematic. I would suggest that journalists keep on asking the questions during the coming press conferences in Washington, DC, let them explain. By Shereena Qazi. Published On 21 Mar Al Jazeera: What was your methodology for researching this book?

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