The Afghan Taliban released an audio message Saturday it said was
from leader Mullah Akhtar Mansour, vehemently rejecting reports of his
death in a firefight with his own commanders as "enemy propaganda".
The
16-minute file said those "rumours" had been deliberately planted to
weaken the Taliban, which has seen a new resurgence under the firebrand
supremo despite its internal divisions.
"I have recorded this message to let everyone know that I am alive," the man purported to be Mansour says in a relaxed drawl.
Multiple
reports citing intelligence and insurgent sources had stated that
Mansour was wounded or killed on Tuesday in a firefight at an insurgent
gathering in Kuchlak.
"I
didn't have a fight with anyone, no meeting was held and I have not
been to Kuchlak (near Quetta in Pakistan) in years. This is all enemy
propaganda," the message added. The clip, emailed to media by a
Taliban spokesperson, comes after days of fevered speculation about the
fate of Mansour, who was elected leader just four months ago in a bitter
power succession.
The voice in the clip could not be
independently verified by AFP while some militant commanders said it
appeared to be that of Mansour. But government spokesperson Sultan
Faizi, who sparked a flurry of reactions when he tweeted on Friday that
Mansour was dead, said it was not certain the audio message was from
him.
"We will do our assessment," he said in a new tweet. The
Taliban, which saw its first formal split last month, had appeared
anxious to quell speculation about Mansour's death as it grapples with
simmering divisions inside the movement.
Vehement denials by the
Islamist group of any shoot-out had fallen on sceptical ears, especially
after they kept the death of longtime chief Mullah Omar secret for two
years. "The Taliban is suffering from a credibility crisis after
they admitted to hiding Omar's death," Kabul-based military analyst
Jawed Kohistani told AFP.

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