New Taliban leader facing tension as top official quits

PESHAWAR: A top Taliban official announced his resignation on Tuesday amid a growing leadership struggle in the Afghan insurgent movement after the news of the death of leader Mullah Mohammad Omar last week.

The swift announcement that Omar's longtime deputy, Mullah Mohammad Akhtar Mansour, would be the new leader has riled many senior figures angry about the implication that Mansour covered up Omar's death for more than two years.

The infighting could split the Taliban and threatens tentative peace talks with the Kabul government to end 13 years of war that began with a U.S.-led campaign after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

Since Mansour's appointment was announced by the Taliban leadership council based in Quetta, Pakistan, it has been denounced by several top members of the group, including Omar's own brother.

On Tuesday, Taliban official Syed Mohammad Tayab Agha announced he was stepping down as director of the Political Office in the Qatari capital Doha, originally set up to enable the Taliban to negotiate in any peace process.

Agha said he considered the decision to conceal Omar's death - generally attributed to Mansour - a "historic mistake by the individuals concerned".

"Now, as the leader is appointed outside the country and from the people who are residing outside the country is also considered as a great historical mistake," he said in a statement.

He said previous leaders appointed outside the country going back to the invasion by Soviet forces, and the government set up after the Taliban were ousted, had "very bad repercussions".

The leader should be appointed "in presence of the courageous mujahideen in their strongholds inside the country", Agha said, referring to Islamist fighters.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said he could not confirm the statement came from Agha.

Previously, members of the Doha office had objected to Mansour's reported decision to send his delegation to the first official peace talks between Taliban and Afghan government representatives last month in Pakistan.

Considered close to Pakistan, Mansour faces a challenge to hold the movement together with hardline commanders pressing for an end to talks and the continuation of fighting that has been increasingly successful in recent months.

It remains difficult to assess how serious a threat Mansour faces but the difficulties point to a suspension of the peace process while his position is consolidated. Several commanders are known to have stopped fighting until the situation is clarified.

Perhaps in reaction to the dissent, the Taliban posted videos on Facebook, apparently showing worshippers acclaiming Mansour as leader.