Pakistan strongly denies Mullah Omar’s death in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD – The government yesterday strongly rejected Afghan government claims that Taliban leader Mulla Omar died in Pakistan. Defence minister Khwaja Asif told the National Assembly that he ‘neither died in Pakistan nor was buried’ here.
The government’s focus however was to resume the peace talks between the Taliban and Afghan government which are “postponed and not abandoned”, he said. However, he avoided whether he Mulla Omar had ever operated from inside Pakistan, saying Islamabad wants to remove the impression that it had been interfering in Afghanistan affairs by playing a positive role in Afghan reconciliation. The positive role being played by the governments of Pakistan and Afghanistan for regional peace will one day become part of history, he said.
Afghan peace dialogue has been “postponed and not abandoned” and Pakistan is making efforts to get it resumed, he added. His statement on Omar’s death marked the government’s first official response to the allegations that he died at a Karachi hospital in 2013 and was buried in Quetta.
“Mulla Omar neither died nor was buried in Karachi, Quetta or any other part of Pakistan. whether he died now or earlier, this is also a controversy and we don’t want to get involved in it,” Asif said. The statements made by Taliban’s new leader also prove that he died in Afghanistan, he said in reply to questions from PPP lawmaker Naveed Qamar.
Qamar had demanded the government that the ‘mystery’ regarding Omar’s death should be revealed, warning that it could affect the nascent reconciliation process between Taliban and Afghan government.
A day before Pakistan was to host a second round of peace talks between Afghan and Taliban negotiators, Afghanistan’s anti-talks lobby claimed last week that Omar died in Pakistan, prompting the Taliban to pull out of talks and throwing the peace process into turmoil.
The Taliban has chosen Omar’s deputy Mullah Akhtar Mansoor as its new leader, but he is facing opposition from senior leaders within the militant group and they have refused to swear allegiance to Mansoor.
Khawaja Asif said that reported leadership rivalry is also an internal matter of the Taliban and his country does not want to be involved in this controversy either. “Our focus is to create peace and we don’t accept that we have a control on Taliban. Our role is that of a mediator,” said the minister, adding that Pakistan only wished for continuation of reconciliation process.

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