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<strong>Where is the Taliban&#39;s supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada? He has been out of the public eye after he became the chief of the group in 2016 after the killing in a US drone strike of Mullah Akhtar Mansoor, after he was returning from Iran.&nbsp; Mansoor was the successor of the one-eyed Mullah Omar, the group&rsquo;s founder.</strong></p>
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Akhundzada never made a public appearance, and, according to intelligence sources, he&nbsp; has been living under strict security of the Pakistani spy agency ISI in Karachi. Now the Taliban suddenly announced that their supreme leader has reached Kandahar.</p>
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&ldquo;The news of&nbsp; Amir-ul-Momineen&#39;s death is false. He is alive and is currently holding consultations on political and military issues in Kandahar,&rdquo; said the group&rsquo;s spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid on Sunday.</p>
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<strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.indianarrative.com/world-news/taliban-desperate-to-capture-its-place-of-birth-kandahar-103814.html">Taliban desperate to capture its place of birth–Kandahar</a> </strong></p>
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This is the first time in the last 20 years that the Taliban has revealed the location and presence of their supreme leader at a specific location, after the US invasion collapsed their regime in 2001.</p>
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&ldquo;Our Amir will soon appear in public&nbsp; and will also be a part of the coming system of Afghanistan,&rdquo; said the spokesperson to Reuters, &ldquo;Slowly and gradually the world will see all our leaders and there will be no shadow of secrecy.&rdquo;</p>
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&ldquo;The leadership has assigned deputy chief Sirajuddin Haqqani and the other deputy chief Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob to finalize names for the cabinet,&rdquo; the senior Taliban leader said. The final approval of the names would come from Akhundzada himself.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
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The Taliban have a long history of keeping their supreme leader away from the public gaze.&nbsp; The group&#39;s founder, Mullah Muhammad Omar, was&nbsp; rarely seen and stayed &ldquo;hidden&rdquo; in Kandahar,&nbsp; when the group came into&nbsp; power in its first edition.</p>
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In 2015, the Taliban confirmed covering up their former leader Mullah Omar&#39;s death for more than two years.</p>
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Akhundzada has&nbsp; adopted a similar elusive style.</p>
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Little is still known about Akhundzada&rsquo;s&nbsp; whereabouts, his role, other than the release of annual text messages by the group during Islamic holidays. Interestingly, he did not issue any&nbsp; statement since the Taliban swept to power and took control of Afghanistan in mid-August.</p>
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<strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.indianarrative.com/world-news/will-taliban-fulfill-its-promise-of-an-inclusive-government-108616.html">Will Taliban 2.0 fulfill its promise of an inclusive government?</a></strong></p>
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Akhundzada is known as a hardliner religious scholar and a &ldquo;ruthless&rdquo; judge handing down death sentences during the previous Taliban rule in Afghanistan.</p>
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It was under his leadership that&nbsp; the Taliban had signed the Doha Agreement with the US in February 2020. In a text message then, Akhundzada called it a &ldquo;big victory&rdquo; for the group.</p>
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According to news reports, like the founder Mullah Omar, Akhundzada will play the highest role. He will remain the supreme commander and head of an apex political&nbsp; council. His&nbsp; three deputies will hold positions of the president and other important&nbsp; posts to govern the country. Akhundzada has never appeared on television&nbsp; or any video clips and there are very few photographs that exist in the public domain.</p>
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His deputies, on the other hand, are relatively more visible in the public eye. Akhundzada&#39;s first deputy, Mullah Abdul Baradar who represented the group during the Doha negotiations with the US, is head of the group&rsquo;s political wing. There is widespread speculation that he will&nbsp; become President.</p>
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His second deputy, Mohammad Yaqoob, head&nbsp; of the Taliban&rsquo;s military affairs,&nbsp; enjoys a strong following within the Taliban as he is the&nbsp; son and &ldquo;heir&rdquo; of Mullah&nbsp; Omar. The third,&nbsp; Sirajuddin Haqqani, is the powerful head of the Haqqani network, a US-designated terrorist organisation with strong ties to Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Al-Qaeda.</p>
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In their internal consultations, the Taliban are also discussing the possibility of making either Sirajuddin Haqqani or Mullah Yaqoob the &ldquo;Raees ul Wazara,&rdquo; a position equivalent to a prime minister.</p>
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But&nbsp; it is not clear that like Mullah Omar, whether Akhundzada will be staying in Kandahar, the Taliban&rsquo;s spiritual birth place or in a safe house in Pakistan. According to various reports, Akhundzada travelled to Kandahar under security provided by the ISI.</p>
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