Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai

Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai is an Afghan Taliban politician and currently serving as the group's political chief.

Biography

An ethnic Pashtun of the Stanikzai subtribe, he was born in 1963 in Baraki Barak district, Logar Province. Having gained a master's degree in political science, he later studied at the Indian Military Academy[1][2] in Dehradun, which in the 1970s was involved in training Afghan army officials. He fought in the Soviet–Afghan War, first with Mohammad Nabi Mohammadi's Islamic and National Revolution Movement of Afghanistan, then with Abdul Rasul Sayyaf's Islamic Union for the Liberation of Afghanistan, as commander of its south-western front.[3]

During the Taliban's 1996–2001 rule of Afghanistan, Stanakzai served as deputy minister of foreign affairs under foreign minister Wakil Ahmed Muttawakil and later deputy minister of health. Though he was reportedly not trusted by Muttawakil, he often gave interviews to foreign media since he speaks English well.

In 1996, Stanikzai traveled to Washington, D.C. as acting foreign minister to ask the Clinton administration to extend diplomatic recognition to Taliban-ruled Afghanistan.[4]

Stanikzai arrived in Qatar in January 2012 to facilitate the opening of the Taliban's political office in that country. On 6 August 2015 he was appointed acting head of the political office in Qatar, replacing Tayyab Agha who had resigned. After his appointment, Stanikzai pledged his allegiance to Akhtar Mansour, saying "I and other members of the Political Office of the Islamic Emirate declare allegiance to the honorable Mullah Akhtar Mansoor." He was confirmed in his position as head of the political office in November 2015.[5][6]

From July 18–22, 2016, he traveled to China for talks with Chinese officials.[7] In February 2017, Stanikzai was denied entry to the United Arab Emirates.[8]

From August 7 to 10 2018, Stanikzal led a delegation of Taliban officials to Uzbekistan. The delegation met with Uzbekistan's Foreign Minister Abdulaziz Kamilov and Uzbekistan's special representative to Afghanistan Ismatilla Irgashev.[9] From August 12–15, he traveled to Indonesia for talks with officials, meeting Indonesian First Vice President Muhammad Jusuf Kalla, Indonesia Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi and Hamid Awaluddin, Indonosia's special representative for Afghanistan.[10]

gollark: I mean, lots of things are *allegedly* for this.
gollark: Ominous™ ones.
gollark: Er. Bye then? Not that Danny can enforce stuff now.
gollark: I *can* actually delete things, but this is the extent of my moderate powers.
gollark: This is a vaguely ridiculous argument too.(even ignoring my issues with this particular case, it's false-dichotomous)

References

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