Senior IS commander in Afghanistan 'killed by a drone'
By BBC News
A third senior Islamic State (IS) commander has been killed in a drone strike in eastern Afghanistan, Afghan intelligence officials and police say.
They say that Shahidullah Shahid was a former member of the Pakistani Taliban who defected to IS. He is believed to have operated under several aliases.There has been no independent confirmation of his death.
The BBC's David Loyn in Kabul says that Mr Shahid was a former spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban.
He was the most prominent of a group of fighters who appeared in a video in January, apparently filmed in Pakistan, pledging allegiance to the self-styled Islamic State.
Our correspondent says that at least two other senior IS members have also been killed in drone strikes - showing that, while the remaining international forces in Afghanistan are not engaged in combat, they are taking seriously the reports of the emergence of the militant group.
The police chief of Nangarhar province confirmed that Mr Shahid had been killed. However there has been no word from Nato - the only force capable of launching drone strikes in the area.
Nangarhar has seen an upsurge of fighting in recent weeks, mostly between IS and the Taliban, forcing thousands of people to flee their homes.
The province borders lawless areas inside Pakistan, and is one of the areas where IS militants are most active in Afghanistan.
"Mr [Shahid] wanted to expand IS's operation in the country and with his death, it will have an impact on their activities," Afghanistan National Directorate of Security spokesman Hasib Sediqi told Reuters.
He said that Mr Shahid was killed on Tuesday in the same drone strike that killed Gul Zaman - another senior IS commander- and 49 other IS militants in the Achin district of Nangarhar province, where they have recently gained ground after pushing back the Taliban.
Afghanistan's spy agency, the National Directorate of Security, recently released a video on Facebook showing how its special forces were fighting against the IS threat.
IS first made its presence felt in Pakistan in April, when its regional spokesman claimed their fighters had shot dead three Pakistani soldiers.
Shahidullah Shahid
- A spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban (TTP), he was sacked in October 2014 after pledging allegiance to Islamic State - the third TTP spokesman to part company with the leadership in recent months
- His sacking was the latest sign of divisions in an already fragmented militant movement which over the years has comprised a bewildering array of splinter groups and factions, the BBC's M Ilyas Khan reported
- A TTP statement at the time of his dismissal said that Shahidullah Shahid was a nom de guerre and its former spokesman's real name was Sheikh Maqbool
- A senior TTP leader also confirmed to a BBC correspondent at the time that Shahidullah Shahid and five other senior figures had defected because they had doubts about the leadership of Mullah Mohammad Omar
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