Afghan four terrorist organizations detained in the north “Islamic State“Supporters said on Sunday Taliban Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Interim Administration.
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“Four people have been detained in the Karkin district of Zhuzhan province in connection with espionage allegations in favor of the Islamic State,” Kari Fasihudin Fitrat Badahshan said on Twitter.
The Islamic State’s Afghan branch is seeking to strengthen its position in northern Afghanistan, Mirs Hyderar Afzali, a former chairman of the Afghan House of Representatives’ Defense Committee, warned earlier.
“The Islamic State is trying to recruit young people in the north and east of the country. The most dangerous members of the Islamic State, who had been detained by Afghan forces, have been released from prisons and are now encouraging young people to cooperate,” Afzali explained on Twitter.
As the Taliban took power, prisoners, both Taliban and Islamic State militants, were released from prisons in July and August, Afghan experts have warned in advance.
As Afzali pointed out, the “Islamic State” does not currently have the best armaments and the best conditions, but the situation may change.
“After all, extremist projects in Afghanistan are not over yet,” the politician said.
Since the Taliban came to power in Afghanistan, a number of bloody terrorist attacks have taken place under the responsibility of the Islamic State.
More than 100 people have been killed and hundreds injured in recent terrorist attacks at Shiite mosques in Condos and Kandahar.
With the withdrawal of the US and other foreign military contingents from Afghanistan, the Taliban launched a general offensive operation in August and briefly seized almost the entire territory of the country, but on August 15 the capital was also in their hands. Kabul.
The only province in Afghanistan that had not come under Taliban control was Punjah for some time, but the Taliban leadership announced on September 6 that the Islamist movement had also taken over the province.
Both the Taliban and the Afghan branch of the Islamic State are groups of Sunni extremist militants. There are differences in religion and strategy, which sometimes lead to bloody clashes.
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