City
Epaper

Afghan President Ghani had reason to fear for his life

By IANS | Published: August 15, 2021 11:21 PM

Kabul, Aug 15 Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani had a reason to fear that his life was in danger ...

Open in App

Kabul, Aug 15 Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani had a reason to fear that his life was in danger as Taliban forces closed in on Kabul, an analyst told Al Jazeera.

"President Ghani has a real reason to fear that his life was under threat," Asfandyar Mir, an expert at United States institute of peace, told Al Jazeera.

"... many Afghans will be disappointed, the contradiction in his messages until yesterday. The fact that he could not hold the country together politically or put up any kind of a military resistance will disappoint his supporters," he said.

Abdullah Abdullah, head of the High Council for National Reconciliation, has posted a video to Facebook confirming that Ghani has left the country.

He said that Ghani left the people of Afghanistan in mess and misery and God will hold him accountable and the country will judge.

He has asked people to keep calm and for the Afghan security forces to cooperate in ensuring security.

Afghan Defence Minister Bismillah Mohammadi, in a tweet apparently referring to Ghani and his associates, lamented that they "Tied our hands behind our backs and sold the homeland, damn the rich man and his gang".

VOA reported Ghani, along with his Vice President and other senior officials, flew out of the country on Sunday, setting the stage for Taliban insurgents to regain power in Afghanistan 20 years after a US-led military invasion ousted them.

There was no comment from Ghani or his embattled administration in Kabul. In a record message on Saturday, Ghani had told the nation he was consulting with both national and international players on the situation which he called an "imposed war".

Vice President Amrullah Saleh, who is said to have accompanied Ghani and the others who left, in a tweet, vowed not to bow to the Taliban, but he did not respond in the message to reports of him leaving the country.

On Sunday morning, a Taliban delegation engaged prominent Afghan jihadi leaders, politic and elders in negotiations that culminated in Ghani stepping down from office, sources directly aware of the developments told VOA.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: AfghanistanKabulTalibanAshraf GhaniAl JazeeraAbdullah AbdullahAfgAfghan high council for national reconciliationTalibansAfghan high council of national reconciliation
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalWife Accuses Husband of Rape for Taking Her to Afghanistan; Supreme Court Stays Proceedings

NationalAfghanistan Consul General Zakia Wardak Resigns After DRI Intercepts Her With Gold Worth Rs 18 Crore at Mumbai Airport

InternationalChina: At Least 19 Killed, Dozens Injured After Highway Collapses in Guangdong Province

InternationalAfghanistan Shooting: Gunman Kills Six Worshippers in Mosque in Herat Province

InternationalAfghanistan: World Food Programme Says It Has Been Giving Food, Cash to 6 Mn People Monthly

International Realted Stories

InternationalNetanyahu predicts warrant application will turn ICC into a 'farce'

InternationalBiden slams 'outrageous' ICC request for Netanyahu's arrest warrant

InternationalUS condoles deaths of Iran's president, foreign minister in helicopter crash

InternationalCultural diversity in UAE a source of strength, flexibility, innovation: Zaki Nusseibeh

InternationalNorway envoy May-Elin Stener meets Kerala Governor Arif Mohammed Khan