WAKIL AHMED MUTTAWAKIL

(Redirected from Wakil Ahmad Mutawakkil)
Wakil Ahmed Muttawakil.

'Wakil Ahmad Mutawakil' (born circa 1971) was the last Foreign Minister in the Taliban government of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
Profile: Wakil Ahmad Mutawakil

Prior to this he served as spokesman and secretary to Mullah Mohammed Omar, leader of the Taliban. After the Northern Alliance accompanied by U.S. and British forces ousted the regime, Mutawakil surrendered in Kandahar to government troops.

Contents
Reportedly warned the USA of the upcoming attack of September 11, 2001
Defected from the Taliban?
Surrender confirmed
Detention
Disowned by the Taliban
Position within Hamid Karzai's government
Move to Kabul
References

Reportedly warned the USA of the upcoming attack of September 11, 2001


According to the ''BBC'', Tohir Yo‘ldosh (leader of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan) learned that al Qaeda was planning to use hijacked airliners to attack the United States on September 11, 2001, prior to the attacks.
Taleban 'warned US of huge attack'

The ''BBC'' reported that Yo‘ldosh then informed the Taliban's Foreign Minister, Muttawakil, who sent an envoy to warn the USA of al Qaeda's attack plans prior to September 11, 2001. The reason the ''BBC'' offered for Yo‘ldosh to initiate an advance warning to the USA of the attacks, was that he was concerned that an al Qaeda attack on the USA would trigger an American counter-attack, which would imperil the safe haven for his group had been enjoying in Afghanistan.

Defected from the Taliban?


In October of 2001, the month following al Qaeda's attacks in the USA, Muttawakil was reported to be in Pakistan.
Taleban minister's 'peace role' mystery

According to the ''BBC'' some rumors said he was trying to negotiate an end to the US aerial assault on Afghanistan; that he was suggesting the Taliban hand over Bin Laden.
Muttawakil was reported to have had a 90 minute meeting with Lieutenant General Ehsanul Haq, the head of Pakistan's powerful Interservice Intelligence Directorate. He was rumored to have asked General Haq to lobby United States Secretary of State Colin Powell, that an American ceasefire would allow moderate elements within the Taliban, like Muttawakil, to push Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar to abandon Bin Laden.
On Monday October 15, 2001, it was reported that Muttawakil had arrived in the United Arab Emirates in order to defect from the Taliban. UAE officials denied this report.

Surrender confirmed


The BBC confirmed that Muttawakil had surrendered, after two weeks of negotiation, in early February of 2002.
Karzai frees 300 Taleban soldiers

U.S. begins questioning Taliban foreign minister

Abdullah Abdullah the minister who held the same portfolia in Hamid Karzai's Afghan Transitional Authority as Muttawakil had held under the Taliban, stated that Muttawakil should stand trial for war crimes.

Detention


Fazal Mohammad,
detained on suspicion of being a former Taliban commander, was released from American custody for medical reasons in mid-2002.
Taliban prisoner claims sex abuse in Afghan jail


★ He reported that he had been held in American custody in Kandahar with about 300 other captives, including Wakil Ahmed Mutawakil, and two of his former deputies, Maulawi Khirullah Khairkhwa, and Abdul Hai Mutmaen.

★ He reported that they were fed starvation rations, and their wounds were left untreated.

★ He reported that captives were subjected to sexual abuse, and attacks from dogs.
The BBC reported, on Wednesday, October 8, 2003, that Muttawakil had recently been released from eighteen months of detention in Bagram, and had returned to his families home in Kandahar.
Confusion over 'freed' Taleban figure

Muttawakil is reported to have said:
On Monday, July 4, 2005 the BBC reported that spent the three years after his surrender in US detention and under Afghan house arrest.
Ex-Taleban chief's brother killed

Following the end of his house arrest Muttawakil took positions at odds with those of the former Taliban regime. He said he no longer opposed female education, so long as it was consistent with Afghan culture. And he said that supporting Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda had brought suffering to Afghanistan. But he still defended some other aspects of the Taliban's former policies.

Disowned by the Taliban


On Tuesday October 21, 2003, the Taliban disowned Muttawakil.
Taleban 'turn on ex-minister'

The BBC was told by a Taliban spokesman that Muttawakil "does not represent our will".
In 2003 Muttawakil's location and status was a matter for speculation. The BBC reported that he had been released from detention from the infamous United States Bagram Theater Detention Facility.
The BBC also reports that the US was guarding him, for his own protection, at their base in Kandahar.
They report that aides to Muttawakil assert that the USA has given Muttawakil two choices:
join the Karzai government as a spokesman and adviser to the Afghan president; or seek political asylum in a Western country.
However, the aides said, Muttawakil wanted to take a break from involvement in Afghan politics, and, if he were to seek Asylum, he would wish to do so in an Arab country.

Position within Hamid Karzai's government


Mutawakil ran for parliamentary elections in September 2005.
Ex-Taleban chief's brother killed

Ex-Taleban chief to run in polls

Despite his position with the Taliban leadership, he is now a part of the present government under Hamid Karzai's administration and may even be seen as a moderate.
W.A Mutawakil's brother Maulvi Jalil Ahmed was for six years a Muslim cleric in the city of Quetta, Pakistan. He was killed during a shooting incident in Quetta in July 2005.

Move to Kabul


An article in the German publication Der Spiegel, on April 12 2007, about the Taliban's former ambassador to Pakistan, Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, said he had moved into a "...handsome guest house, located in the dusty modern neighborhood Khosh Hal Khan."
Ex-Taliban Official Calls for Unity Government in Afghanistan

The article goes on to state that the new home Karzai's government has provided Zaeef is around the corner from Muttawakil's. Der Spiegel described Zaeef's home as being guarded, inside and out, by a heavily armed security detail. Like Muttawakil, Zaeef is regarded as one of the more moderate former members of the Taliban.

References



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