Mohammad Rabbani
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Mullah Mohammad Rabbani |
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In office 27 September 1996 – 21 April 2001 |
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President | Mohammed Omar |
Preceded by | Gulbuddin Hekmatyar |
Succeeded by | Abdul Kabir (Acting) |
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Born | 1955/1956 Pashmol, Afghanistan |
Died | 21 April 2001 Rawalpindi, Pakistan |
Political party | Taliban |
Mullah Mohammad Rabbani (1955/1956–April 21, 2001) was one of the main founders of the Taliban movement. He was second in power only to the supreme leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar, in the Taliban hierarchy.
When the Soviet Union chose to withdraw from Afghanistan in 1989, and after many more years of insurgenence and civil war, he led the Taliban guerrillas in the final assault against the capital, Kabul.
He served as prime minister of Afghanistan and head of the advisory council. There were also rumors that Mullah Rabbani and the head of the Taliban movement had serious political differences. While Rabbani and the ruling council constituted the public face of Afghanistan, the important decisions were made by Mullah Mohammed Omar, who resided in the southern city of Kandahar.
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[edit] Early years
Rabbani had received an Islamic education at home in Pashmol village in Kandahar province, before going on to an Islamic seminary. The invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union in 1979 put a stop to his education as he volunteered for the jihad.
His role in the civil war ended when the Soviet army withdrew in 1989, but other members and factions of the mujahedin fought on, first against the Afghan Communist government and then against each other.
It was a time of lawlessness and chaos. The Communist government fell in 1992 and Afghanistan was fought over by factions of the mujahedin. Kandahar was particularly a battleground for commanders turned warlords.
Rabbani and about 30 other religious students or Taliban decided to take the warlords on, first in the border town of Spin Boldak and then in Kandahar itself. "Our concern," said Rabbani at the time, "is the establishment of an Islamic system and the elimination of unrest and cruelty from our country."
[edit] Fall of Kabul and creation of the Emirate
When UN Special Envoy Mehmoud Mestiri had resumed his peace parleys in Afghanistan in March 1996, he had been assured by the political leadership of the Taliban, represented by Mullah Rabbani, who also commanded the forces encircling Kabul, that the Taliban were ready for discussions with the Rabbani government.
Originally a Taliban idea endorsed by Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and accepted on behalf of the United Front (formerly the Northern Alliance) by President Burhanuddin Rabbani in early January 1998, the proposal took shape as a proposed commission of ulema, or religious scholars, to settle the Afghan conflict in the light of the shariah.
However, no progress was made until, once again, Prime Minister Sharif intervened two months later, in March, by inviting Mullah Rabbani, now head of the Taliban shura in Kabul, to Islamabad and obtained from him an agreement in principle for the convening of a Steering committee in preparation for the ulema commission.
On 9 April, the United Nations Special Envoy went to Kabul and discussed with Mullah Rabbani and other Taliban leaders how to proceed with the idea of a Steering Committee for preparations for an ulema meeting.
With this perceived shift in the Taliban's strategy, Mestiri had moved to Kabul to tie up other details. This would explain in large measure the Taliban's removal of heavy weaponry from areas surrounding Kabul very recently. But no sooner had Mullah Rabbani given this assurance to the visiting UN envoy, the religious leadership based in Kandahar rejected talks with Kabul, scuttling Mestiri's efforts.
On 26 September 1996 Taliban forces set up an interim Government under Mohammed Rabbani and Afghanistan was declared a complete Islamic Emirate under Sharia law. It was Rabbani who gave the dramatic press conference from the presidential palace claiming victory.
Many analysts believe that it was him who ordered the execution of former President Mohammed Najibullah when the Taliban took Kabul in late 1996. Rabbani, who had been a prominent mujahedin commander, attracted many fighters to Taliban ranks.
[edit] Quotes about Osama Bin Laden
He declared to the international community that his government did not support terrorism.
- We will not allow anyone to perform any terrorist acts inside or from Afghanistan against anyone. We are a free country where Osama is living as a guest. This is the reality and it is up to the world to accept it
Mullah Rabbani noted that bin Laden had taken up residence when Afghanistan was under the control of the previous regime. He also maintained that there was not sufficient evidence linking him to terrorist bombings in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam and that, at any rate, bin Laden was no longer able to carry out activities from Afghan territory.
[edit] Decline and death
He died at the age of 45, in a military hospital in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, of liver cancer. According to a press release from the Afghan Embassy in Islamabad:
- Mullah Mohammad Rabbani was one of the main founders of the Movement and greatly contributed to peace and security in our country. His service to Islam, Afghanistan and the Afghan nation is unforgettable. His demise is an irreparable loss.
Rabbani's body was repatriated to the southern Afghan city of Kandahar by a UN plane, permitted to operate on humanitarian grounds despite the air embargo against the Taliban Movement.
Regarding him as somewhat of a moderate, members of the opposition voiced fears that hardliners within the Taliban would strengthen their hold on power following Rabbani's death.
[edit] References
http://www.worldstatesmen.org/Afghanistan.htm
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Gulbuddin Hekmatyar |
Prime Minister of Afghanistan 1996 – 2001 |
Succeeded by Abdul Kabir Acting |