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IS Leader in Afghanistan Killed in Air Raids

Abu Saad Erhabi was killed in airstrikes in eastern Nangarhar province.
Abu Saad Erhabi was killed in airstrikes in eastern Nangarhar province.

The leader of the self-styled Islamic State terror group in Afghanistan was killed in airstrikes in eastern Nangarhar province, the fourth head of the armed group to die since it emerged in the country in recent years.

Abu Saad Erhabi and 10 other IS members died in a joint operation with coalition forces on Saturday night, the National Directorate of Security said in a statement on Sunday, Al Jazeera reported.

“The emir of Daesh in Afghanistan—along with 10 others—was killed,” it said, using the armed group’s Arabic acronym.

The air attacks on a village in Khugyani district, near the border with Pakistan, also destroyed a large number of weapons, explosives and ammunition, the agency said.

The provincial governor’s spokesman Attaullah Khogyani confirmed Erhabi’s death.

US forces in Afghanistan said they conducted an air raid in the location described by Afghan officials, which “targeted a senior leader of a designated terrorist organization.”

  Fourth Leader Killed

Erhabi was the fourth IS leader killed in Afghanistan since the group emerged there in early 2015. Erhabi succeeded Abu Sayed who was killed in a US drone attack in early July.

IS has a relatively small but potent presence in Afghanistan, mainly in Nangarhar—the birthplace of the group’s Afghan branch—but more recently in the northern province of Jowzjan where it is fighting for control of smuggling routes into neighboring Turkmenistan.

Hours before Saturday’s air raids, the group claimed a deadly suicide attack that appeared to target a sit-in protest outside an election commission office in the city of Jalalabad. Two people were killed.

The bombings followed a number of attacks claimed by IS in recent weeks, including assaults on several government installations in Kabul and a bombing at a school in a Shia area of the capital that killed at least 37 people.

The group, however, has suffered repeated setbacks amid a bloody turf war with the much larger Taliban. Estimates of IS fighters’ numbers in the country run as high as 2,000.

More than 150 IS fighters surrendered to Afghan forces in Jowzjan on August 1, a move troops and the Taliban hailed as the end of the group’s foothold in the north of the country.

 

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