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Afghanistan arrests ‘foreign IS member’ for Pakistan embassy attack

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AFP
AFP
Agence France-Presse

ISLAMABAD: A foreign member of the Islamic State (IS) group has been arrested in connection with the last week Pakistan’s embassy attack in the Afghan capital, the Taliban’s chief spokesman said Monday.

A security guard was wounded by shots fired at the embassy in Friday’s attack. Islamabad described the incident as an assassination attempt against the head of the mission.

No country officially recognises Afghanistan’s Taliban government, but Pakistan kept its embassy open even as the Taliban took over in August last year and maintains a full diplomatic mission.

Afghan government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said Monday that special forces had arrested the person responsible for the embassy attack.

“This person is a citizen of a foreign country and a member of IS,” he said.

“The investigation revealed that this attack was jointly organised by IS and rebels. Some foreign malicious circles are behind the attack and the aim was to create distrust between the two brotherly countries.”

Mujahid declined to say what nationality the suspect was, or if it was the same person other officials reported had been arrested hours after the incident.

Pakistan is home to more than a million Afghan refugees, and the porous border they share is frequently the scene of clashes.

Pakistan’s foreign ministry said Monday that the ambassador, Ubaid ur Rehman Nizamani, was now in Islamabad “for consultations”, but said there were no plans to close the embassy or withdraw staff.

The Taliban are at pains to portray Afghanistan as safe for diplomats, but two Russian embassy staff members were killed in a suicide bombing outside the mission in September in another attack claimed by IS.

Last month a gunman shot dead a Pakistan security guard at the Chaman border crossing, leading to its closure for a week.

Pakistan’s separate home-grown Taliban — whose leaders and fighters have long operated from Afghanistan — last week said they were ending a shaky ceasefire with Islamabad.

Since returning to power the Afghan Taliban have insisted, they would not allow foreign militant groups to operate from home soil.

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