Afghan Civil War (1992-1996)
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Afghan Civil War (1992-1996 period) | ||||||||
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Part of Afghan Civil War | ||||||||
Factions after the 1996 fall of Kabul. |
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Combatants | ||||||||
Islamic State of Afghanistan | Hezb-i-Islami | Taliban | ||||||
Commanders | ||||||||
Burhanuddin Rabbani Ahmed Shah Massoud |
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar Abdul Rashid Dostum |
Mohammed Omar | ||||||
Abdul Rashid Dostum joined forces with Gulbuddin Hekmatyar in 1994. |
Afghan Civil War |
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Soviet involvement · Civil War (1989-1992) · Civil War (1992-1996) · Civil War (1996-2001)· U.S. involvement |
The 1992 to 1996 phase of the Afghan Civil War began with the capture of Kabul by the Mujahideen, and involved different factions of the Mujahideen turning on one another until finally in 1996 the Taliban captured Kabul.
[edit] Timeline
After the fall of Kabul, the civil war entered a new phase. The new problem was to establish a new government. Finally, the Islamic Jihad Council agreed to form an interim government.
It was decided that a 51 man body, headed by Sibghatullah Mojaddedi, would go inside Afghanistan so that they could take over power from the present rulers of Kabul completely, and without any terms and conditions during the two months period. The head of this body would also be the President of the State during this two month period. After this period, this body would remain as an interim Islamic Council, along with the Transitional State and its Chairmanship would be held by Mojaddedi.
Mojaddedi was chosen as the president, Commander Ahmad Shah Massoud was given the position of Defence Minister, Sayyaf took control of the foreign ministry and other parties were given the minor positions. All the main positions of the government were given to Tajiks especially those from Panjshir. Since the creation of the modern day Afghanistan by Abdali in 1747, it had been ruled by the Pushtuns who make up as much as 50% of the population. The Islamic Jihad Council agreed that a nation wide election to soon hold elections. Although some elements of the PDPA had infiltrated the government in the name of Mojadeddi, most of the Parchamis had managed to fled the country. Khalq members who were mostly pushtuns, either joined Gulbuddin Hekmatyar or fled to Pakistan.
[edit] Fighting breaks out (1992)
Soon after the liberation of Kabul, Hezb-i-Islami started firing rockets at Kabul. Although Hekmatyar insisted that only Islamic Jihad Council areas were targeted, the rockets mostly fell over the houses of the innocent civilians of Kabul. The new government introduced new strict laws which were thoroughly Islamic. Strict punishments according to Islamic law were very new to the people of Kabul who were already suffering from Hezb-i-Islami rocket attacks.
In June 1992, as scheduled, Burhanuddin Rabbani became president of Afghanistan, while Hekmatyar continued to bombard Kabul with rockets. The U.N. reported that 1,800 civilians died in rocket attacks between May and August, and 500,000 people fled the city.
After Rabbani's appointment, the whole control of the government went into Jamiat Islami hands. The Tajik domination of the control of Afghanistan was the first time in the land since a brief seizure of power in the 1920s.
The once powerful Dostum/Massod alliance was beginning to crack as the Uzbeks did not gain any power under the new leadership. Different militia factions were fighting over control of different areas all over the country. Kandahar was filled with gangsters as three different commanders Amir Lalai, Gul Agha and Mullah Naqib Ullah engaged in an extremly violent struggle for power. The bullet riddled city came to be a centre of lawlesness and crime.
Just like the other parts of the country, serious fighting also broke out between the Saudi-backed Pashtun Sunni Ittehad-e Islami party and the Iran-backed Shi'a Hezb-e Wahdat party in Kabul. Both groups engaged in abducting Hazara and Pashtun civilians. Hundreds were killed, and as many as 1,000 detained and tortured before a cease-fire finally took hold in June. Continuing tension between ethnic groups erupted in other violent confrontations throughout the remainder of the year. The government backed Sayyaf Pushtun militia operated in western sectors of Kabul where most Hazaras lived.
In the month of August alone, a bombardment of artillery shells, rockets and fragmentation bombs killed over 2,000 people in Kabul, most of them civilians. Then in November, in a very effective move, Hekmatyar's forces, together with guerrillas from some of the Arab groups, barricaded a power station in Sarobi, 30 miles east of Kabul, cutting electricity to the capital and shutting down the water supply, which is dependent on power. His forces and other Mujahideen were also reported to have prevented food convoys from reaching the city.
On November 23, Minister of Food Sulaiman Yaarin reported that the city's food and fuel depots were empty. The government was now under heavy pressure.
[edit] Renewed tensions (1993)
On January 3, 1993, Burhanuddin Rabbani, the leader of the Jamiat Islami party, was sworn in as President. However Rabbani's authority remained limited to only part of Kabul; the rest of the city remained divided among rival Mujahideen factions. In response, on January 19, a short-lived cease-fire broke down when Hezb-i-Islami forces renewed rocket attacks on Kabul from their base in the south of the city. Civilians were the main victims in the fighting which killed some 1,000 before a peace accord was signed on March 8.
Under the March accord, brokered by Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, Rabbani and Hekmatyar agreed to share power until elections could be held in late 1994. Hekmatyar was named Prime Minister, but by November he had not entered Kabul because of continuing opposition from forces loyal to Massoud and sometimes those allied to the Uzbek commander, General Abdul Rashid Dostum. The cease-fire broke down again on May 11, leaving more than 700 dead in bombing raids, street battles and rocket attacks in and around Kabul. The parties agreed to a new peace accord in Jalalabad on May 20 under which Massoud agreed to relinquish the post of Defense Minister. A council of commanders was to assume that office, as well as the office of Interior Minister, but by mid-November the power struggle remained unresolved.