News / Asia

    IS Video Shows Group's Extreme Violent Acts in Afghanistan

    FILE - An Afghan National Army (ANA) soldier stands guard in Narai military camp in Ghazi Abad district, Feb. 23, 2014.
    FILE - An Afghan National Army (ANA) soldier stands guard in Narai military camp in Ghazi Abad district, Feb. 23, 2014.
    Ayaz Gul

    Loyalists of Islamic State (IS) in Afghanistan released a new video Friday showing a massive suicide car bombing of an Afghan security outpost and several other violent acts elsewhere, including some carried out in neighboring Pakistan.

    The purported IS video released to reporters, titled “Khurasan, The Graveyard of Murtadeen (apostates),” shows footage of militants ambushing a convoy of Pakistani security forces traveling through a mountainous terrain, firefights with security forces elsewhere, and two roadside bombs blowing up Afghan government vehicles, according to the Pashto language subtitling.

    A man is beheaded and two others are shot at close range in the back of the head. It said the violent acts were being conducted in eastern Afghan provinces Logar, Nangarhar and Paktika, near the border with Pakistan.

    WATCH: Purported Islamic State video showing suspected suicide bombing

    IS Video Shows Group's Extreme Violent Acts in Afghanistani
    X
    December 25, 2015 1:35 PM
    A purported Islamic State video released to reporters, titled “Khurasan, The Graveyard of Murtadeen (apostates),” shows footage of militants ambushing a convoy of Pakistani security forces traveling through a mountainous terrain, firefights with security forces elsewhere, and two roadside bombs blowing up Afghan government vehicles, according to Pashto language subtitles.

    Toward the end, the video shows a man saying goodbye to fellow militants before boarding an explosives-laden vehicle and driving it into an Afghan National Army outpost.

    A massive explosion sends a huge smoke cloud in the air, apparently destroying the entire facility in the district of Azra in Logar.

    The authenticity of the video and the dates the violence took place could not be immediately verified.

    IS province

    Islamic State, which controls large areas in Iraq and Syria, released a map in January that identified Khurasan as its “province,” which includes areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan.

    The video also shows footage of two separate attacks against security forces and pro-government tribal leaders in Pakistan’s semi-autonomous districts of Bajaur and Khyber, bordering Afghanistan.

    It also claimed responsibility for being behind the attack on a bus in Karachi in May in which gunmen massacred 43 members of the minority Shi’ite Ismaili community.

    FILE - U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter told his Afghan counterpart Friday in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, that the U.S. is “with you,” committed to supporting Afghan security forces and building their capabilities for years to come. Carter is shown in Irbil, Iraq,
    FILE - U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter told his Afghan counterpart Friday in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, that the U.S. is “with you,” committed to supporting Afghan security forces and building their capabilities for years to come. Carter is shown in Irbil, Iraq,

    During his visit to Afghanistan last week, U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter underscored the emerging new threat in the region, saying the U.S. military possessed information suggesting that IS was seeking an opportunity to establish “nests” in parts of the strife-torn country, including Nangarhar.

    On Thursday, authorities in the eastern Afghan province claimed to have blocked broadcasts of the so-called "Sadai Khilafat Radio (Voice of Caliphate)," which was airing pro-IS propaganda.

    Pro-IS radio station

    The radio station was recently launched from an unknown location, broadcasting at least one hour a day to attract young Afghan men disenchanted by dim job prospects.

    The Islamic State in Afghanistan is competing with the Taliban insurgency and there have been deadly clashes between the two groups in recent weeks.

    In a statement released Friday, the Taliban rejected media reports it has held talks or sought Russian cooperation in fighting supporters of Islamic State in Afghanistan.

    It claimed the Taliban is capable of handling the threat and has eliminated IS fighters from all 34 provinces of Afghanistan. It said they are now confined to just “a small” area in one province.

    The statement did not name the province, but Afghan officials said that eastern Nangarhar province, on the border with Pakistan, is where IS has established a strong base.

    Earlier this week, Russia’s presidential envoy for Afghanistan, Zamir Kabulov, told the Interfax news agency that Moscow’s interests in Afghanistan “objectively coincide” with those of the Taliban movement in the fight against IS.

    Kabulov said Russia has established communication channels to exchange information with the Taliban.

    You May Like

    Clinton, Trump and the 'Woman’s Card'

    Ask supporters of Democratic front-runner in US presidential campaign, and they’ll tell you Republican presidential candidate is playing a dangerous hand

    Russian Censorship Group Seeks Chinese Help to Better Control Internet

    At recent Safe Internet League forum in Moscow, speakers from both nations underscored desire for authorities to further limit and control information online

    Video Makeshift Pakistani School Helps Slum Kids

    Free classes in Islamabad park serve a few of the country’s nearly 25 million out-of-school youths; NGO cites ‘education crisis’

    This forum has been closed.
    Comment Sorting
    Comments
         
    by: meanbill from: USA
    December 25, 2015 2:42 PM
    Remember? .. According to Islamic Law (concerning prisoners of war), the Qadi (judge) will make the decision if a male prisoner of war lives or dies (by whatever means) or be exchanged for Muslim captives, or ransomed or enslaved? .. Female and children prisoners of war are not permitted to be killed, but must be exchanged (to redeem Muslim captives) or enslaved as sex slaves, concubines, wives or maids? ... All the decisions of the Qadi (judge) are final and irrevocable?

    PS; An appointed Qadi (judge) qualifications are, they must be free, sane, adult, trustworthy, and a Muslim, who metes out instant Islamic justice, on the infidels, and impure Muslims and others? .. Some people call the Qadi (judges) decisions war crimes and crimes against humanity, but in reality, the Muslim Qadi (judge) decisions are legal under Muslim Islamic law? .. Now, everybody knows their fate if captured as a prisoner of war by the ISIL terrorist army?

    Featured Videos

    Your JavaScript is turned off or you have an old version of Adobe's Flash Player. Get the latest Flash player.
    Turkish Kurd Islamist Rally Stokes Tensionsi
    X
    April 29, 2016 12:28 AM
    In a sign of the rising power of Islamists in Turkey, more than 100,000 people recently gathered in Diyarbakir, the main city in Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish southeast, to mark the birthday of the Prophet Muhammad. The gathering highlighted tensions with the pro-secular Kurdish nationalist movement. Dorian Jones reports from Diyarbakir.
    Video

    Video Turkish Kurd Islamist Rally Stokes Tensions

    In a sign of the rising power of Islamists in Turkey, more than 100,000 people recently gathered in Diyarbakir, the main city in Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish southeast, to mark the birthday of the Prophet Muhammad. The gathering highlighted tensions with the pro-secular Kurdish nationalist movement. Dorian Jones reports from Diyarbakir.
    Video

    Video Pakistani School Helps Slum Kids

    Master Mohammad Ayub runs a makeshift school in a public park in Islamabad. Thousands of poor children have benefited from his services over the years, but, as VOA's Ayesha Tanzeem reports, roughly 25 million school-age youths don't get an education in Pakistan.
    Video

    Video Florida’s Weeki Wachee ‘Mermaids’ Make a Splash

    Since 1947, ‘mermaids’ have fascinated tourists at central Florida’s Weeki Wachee Springs State Park with their fluid movements and synchronized ballet. Performing underwater has its challenges, including cold temperatures and a steady current, as VOA’s Lin Yang and Joseph Mok report.
    Video

    Video Somali, African Union Forces Face Resurgent Al-Shabab

    The Islamic State terror group claimed its first attack in Somalia earlier this week, though the claim has not been verified by forces on the ground. Meanwhile, al-Shabab militants have stepped up their attacks as Somalia prepares for elections later this year. Henry Ridgwell reports there are growing frustrations among Somalia’s Western backers over the country’s slow progress in forming its own armed forces to establish security after 25 years of chaos.
    Video

    Video Bangladesh Targeted Killings Spark Wave of Fear

    People in Bangladesh’s capital are expressing deep concern over the brutal attacks that have killed secular blogger, and most recently a gay rights activist and an employee of the U.S. embassy. Xulhaz Mannan, an embassy protocol officer and the editor of the country’s only gay and transgender magazine Roopban; and his friend Mehboob Rabbi Tanoy, a gay rights activist, were hacked to death by five attackers in Mannan’s Dhaka home earlier this month.
    Video

    Video Documentary Tells Tale of Chernobyl Returnees

    Ukraine this week is marking the 30th anniversary of the world's worst nuclear accident, at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Soviet officials at first said little about the accident, but later evacuated a 2,600-square-kilometer "exclusion zone." Some people, though, came back. American directors Holly Morris and Anne Bogart created a documentary about this faithful and brave community. VOA's Tetiana Kharchenko reports from New York on "The Babushkas of Chernobyl." Carol Pearson narrates.
    Video

    Video Nigerians Feel Bite of Buhari Economic Policy

    Despite the global drop in the price of oil, Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari has refused to allow the country's currency to devalue, leading to a shortage of foreign exchange. Chris Stein reports from Lagos businessmen and consumers are feeling the impact as the country deals with a severe fuel shortage.
    Video

    Video  Return to the Wild

    There’s a growing trend in the United States to let old or underused golf courses revert back to nature. But as Erika Celeste reports from one parcel in Grafton, Ohio, converting 39 hectares of land back to green space is a lot more complicated than just not mowing the fairway.
    Video

    Video West Urges Unity in Libya as Migrant Numbers Soar

    The Italian government says a NATO-led mission aimed at stemming the flow of migrants from Libya to Europe could be up and running by July. There are concerns that the number of migrants could soar as the route through Greece and the Balkans remains blocked. Western powers say the political chaos in Libya is being exploited by people smugglers — and they are pressuring rival groups to come together under the new unity government. VOA's Henry Ridgwell reports.
    Video

    Video Russia’s TV Rain Swims Against Tide in Sea of Kremlin Propaganda

    Russia’s media freedoms have been gradually eroded under President Vladimir Putin as his government has increased state ownership, influence, and restrictions on critical reporting. Television, where most Russians get their news, has been the main target and is now almost completely state controlled. But in the Russian capital, TV Rain stands out as an island in a sea of Kremlin propaganda.

    Special Report

    Adrift The Invisible African Diaspora