Foreign
Bomb hidden in artificial leg kills top Taliban cleric in Kabul
A prominent cleric Sheikh Rahimullah Haqqani was killed in a suicide bomb blast attack in Kabul, on Thursday.
Reportedly, the Islamic State Khorasan (ISK) late Thursday claimed the killing of Sheikh Rahimullah Haqqani. The group claims that one of his fighters, Khalid al-Loghari, carried out a ‘martyrdom operation’ which resulted in the killing of one of the most prominent enemies of ISKP.
Investigators in Kabul, Afghanistan told reporters that initial investigation into the incident led them to believe that the suicide bomber who targeted Sheikh Rahimullah Haqqani had explosives stored in his prosthetic limbs.
The prominent Afghan cleric had supported the Taliban and was in favour of female education. Sheikh Rahimullah Haqqani reportedly died in a suicide bomb blast in Kabul.
Speaking to Reuters, Taliban sources say the religious leader was targeted by a man who detonated explosives hidden in an artificial plastic limb. The Islamic State (IS) group, which has previously targeted the cleric, claimed responsibility for the bombing saying it happened inside his office.
According to local reports, the attack took place at an Islamic seminary in the Afghan capital.
Sheikh Haqqani was a supporter of Afghanistan’s Taliban government and a prominent critic of the jihadist militant group Islamic State Kohrasan Province (IS-K), a regional affiliate of IS that operates in Afghanistan and opposes the Taliban’s rule.
He is one of the highest profile figures to have been killed in the country since the Taliban returned to power last year. “It’s a very huge loss for the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan,” a senior Taliban official told Reuters news agency, adding that authorities were investigating who was behind the attack.
Despite sharing the same name, he was not related to Afghanistan’s Haqqani militant group network.
The religious leader had previously issued a fatwa, or religious decree, in support of female education – a contentious issue inside Afghanistan.
In an interview early this year, he had argued that Afghan women and girls should be able to access education: “There is no justification in the sharia [law] to say female education is not allowed. No justification at all.”
He added: “All the religious books have stated female education is permissible and obligatory, because, for example, if a woman gets sick, in an Islamic environment like Afghanistan or Pakistan, and needs treatment, it’s much better if she’s treated by a female doctor.”
In all but a handful of provinces in the country, girls’ secondary schools have been ordered to remain closed by the Taliban. Sheikh Haqqani had previously survived two assassination attempts, most recently in 2020 when IS claimed responsibility for an explosion at a religious school in the Pakistani city of Peshawar that killed at least seven people.