ISIL said to be establishing a presence in Afghanistan

Special to WorldTribune.com

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

The top UN envoy in Afghanistan says recent reports indicate the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) extremist group has moved into Afghanistan.

Nicholas Haysom was speaking to the UN Security Council on March 16.

U.N. Special Representative to Afghanistan Nicholas Haysom in Kabul on Feb. 18. / Wakil Kohsar / Getty

U.N. Special Representative to Afghanistan Nicholas Haysom in Kabul on Feb. 18. / Wakil Kohsar / Getty

He said the UN mission’s assessment is that ISIL hadn’t stuck “firm roots” in Afghanistan.

However, Haysom said ISIL had the potential “to offer an alternative flagpole to which otherwise isolated insurgent splinter groups can rally.”

Haysom’s view was echoed by Russia, which urged the Security Council to stop the extremists’ expansion.

Russia’s Deputy UN Ambassador Vladimir Safronkov said Moscow was worried about the rise of the terrorist threat in Afghanistan, especially in the formerly quiet north bordering countries that are its friends and allies.

The two were speaking on March 16 at the start of a meeting of the Security Council during which the council voted unanimously to extend the mandate of the UN mission in Afghanistan until March 17, 2016.

Afghanistan’s UN Ambassador Zahir Tanin agreed that there are reports of the Islamic State group penetrating more areas including Afghanistan “but the main enemy we face is the Taliban that continue to fight against us.”

He added that there may also be “some splinter groups with more extreme orientations.”

Safronkov said extremists in the once quiet north were actively engaging in propaganda activities and recruiting, and were setting up camp.

The resolution adopted by the council calls on the Afghan government, with help from the international community, to continue to tackle threats from the Taliban, Al Qaida, other extremist groups, and drug traders. It does not mention the ISIL group by name.

In its resolution extending the UN mission in Afghanistan, the Security Council stressed the importance of an “Afghan led and Afghan-owned” political process to support reconciliation for all those who renounce violence, have no link to terrorist groups, and respect the constitution including the rights of women.

Tanin said the peace and reconciliation process was the government’s first priority, especially “when violence affects increasing numbers of civilians and when the crippling triple threat of terrorism, extremism, and criminality threatens to undermine the future of the Afghan people and the wider region.”

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