SonofElElyon's Posts
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engrfaruq:You are the one spinning baseless accusations of persecution of the afghan commando by Britain which is ludicrous! Simple logic dictates that he must've been detaimed based on suspicion of threat to Britain's national security.. goes without saying.. Even a child knows that |
engrfaruq:Britain is not Nigeria mister!!! |
oluwaseyi02:He hates Ronaldo.. |
engrfaruq:Likely intelligence sources |
lexy2014:On humanitarian grounds. Only those who helped the foreign forces or are likely to be victimized by the Taliban. Of course there might be infiltrators |
panafrican:No.. Rather the Brits are thinking "is the afghan commando now working for terrorists?" |
The world needs to hear this ! Lalasticlala Seun Mynd44 Dominique |
https://www.withinnigeria.com/gist/2021/09/08/bobrisky-reportedly-impregnates-former-pa-oye-kyme/ Bobrisky Reportedly Impregnates Former PA, Oye Kyme By Samuel David Last Updated Sep 8, 2021 ShareFacebookTwitter Popular Nigerian Cross-dresser, Bobrisky is trending after his former Personal Assistant (PA) Oye Kyme, got pregnant and many have assumed Bobrisky is responsible for the pregnancy. While sharing the photos of her bump on Instagram Minutes ago, Oye Kyme wrote “Guess or tag the father” and many Nigerians have stormed the comment section to tag Idris Okuneye aka Bobrisky. Ivorian oye Kyme, trended on social media in May, 2021 after she tattooed Bobrisky’s name on her laps. Bobrisky then decided to fly her into Nigeria and make her his PA. A position she occupied for only 3 months before their relationship went sour. The cross-dresser’s PA shared videos and photos accusing Bobrisky of beating her for not calling his hair stylist on time. She made other shocking accusations against Bobrisky, all of which he denied. Kyme also alleged that during her time with Bobrisky as PA, she used to help him shave the hair on his chest, wear him his fake butt and also his diapers
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Papanicolou:Childish response |
locodemy:Depends on forces beyond their control |
Who saw him digging ![]() BeeBeeOoh: |
Papanicolou:So name the "majority" who have! He who asserts must prove |
AngelDove10:First post what you have here and if I'm interested I'll chat you up |
lalasticlala:Donation is different from investment. He said investment. Why did you change this to donation ![]() |
If you have any 2 or 3 bedroom bungalow or duplex with separate compound for rent in nice, secure area of isolo / ejigbo axis, post details and price. Pictures also required. |
saphiere:And the woman very innocent.. |
seunmsg:If the person conducts himself in a manner unbefitting of a holder of such title to the embarrassment of the town then that constitutes sufficient grounds for removal by the Oba. I'm talking about Yoruba land |
Awon akotileta dre11: |
helinuesIsaMumu:You should know that the vice president is powerless under the presidential system of government... Moreso under our own "homegrown version".. |
FreeSpirited:That was on a light hearted note.. of course he suffered much more than that |
SATELLITENET:Peru ko, Bolivia ni |
Nuelito:O ga. You blame the sheep and ignore the shepherd. Who has the greater moral responsibility ![]() |
arthurwillia:How can this be? How do you rape someone of same sex and claim to be straight.. either the Taliban rapists are gay or it never happened |
It's clear you desire to have children.. but your lesbian partner can't give you a child. Marry a man. Yield to nature and God.. |
zlantanfan:There should be a clause that allows sack for abysmal performance |
Devgru:Ok. Guess you are a Taliban believer.. and a united nations and all respected intelligence sources disbeliever. You just google ISIS-K and haqqani and see what you get ! I posted a YouTube news video about ISIS-K and haqqani in my last post but you ignored it. Again I post below https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4sfuPNkmfU https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/08/26/afghanistan-kabul-airport-attack-taliban-islamic-state/ The Taliban Are Far Closer to the Islamic State Than They Claim The terror group behind the Kabul attacks has close ties to the Haqqani network. By Sajjan M. Gohel, the international security director at the Asia-Pacific Foundation. Taliban fighters in a vehicle patrol the streets of Kabul on Aug. 23. Taliban fighters in a vehicle patrol the streets of Kabul on Aug. 23. WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES AUGUST 26, 2021, 7:09 PM In an early sign of Afghanistan’s dystopian future as well as a reminder of its dark past, a coordinated suicide attack hit several locations in Kabul, including a hotel and the airport. Dozens of people were killed and hundreds injured, including Afghan civilians attempting to leave the country and the U.S. soldiers overseeing the evacuation. Islamic State-Khorasan has taken responsibility, but the Taliban faction partially in control of security in Kabul over the past several days, the Haqqani network, must also be scrutinized. Ultimately, the attack strategically benefits the Haqqani as it will likely speed up foreign departures and prevent the prospect of further evacuations. Leaving Afghanistan What happens to the country and its people after the forever war ends? There have been repeated warnings of a potential airport attack over the last week. When it came, it was not spontaneous or random but a well-planned assault, using multiple bombs and targets calculated to achieve several objectives. The first and most obvious goal was to kill fleeing Afghans and discourage others from attempting to leave via the airport—or to close the airport itself. But another goal was the death of coalition troops, thus using the specter of terror to ensure the West stuck to the agreed on Aug. 31 deadline to leave the country. The timing of the attack, on the cusp of the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, sends out a powerful signal to other jihadists. The coordinated attack has all the hallmarks of Islamic State-Khorasan, including involving multiple suicide bombers, but disturbingly also has hallmarks of the Haqqani network with its focus on mass casualty atrocities utilizing powerful improvised explosive devices. The Haqqani network is an internationally proscribed terrorist group with generational ties to al Qaeda. It’s often said there’s a clear split between Islamic State-Khorasan and the Taliban, but the harsh reality of terrorism and politics in Afghanistan is the situation is never black and white. Sworn enemies can fight each other one day and collaborate for mutual gain the next day. These groups are intertwined and interconnected. Their tribal and marriage ties ensure ideological separations do not cause permanent fault lines. The Islamic State’s entry in Afghanistan can be traced to a January 2015 audiotape message issued by Abu Muhammad al-Adnani, the Islamic State’s then-head of external operations, who revealed the group’s “expansion” into the “lands of Khorasan,” a term that encompasses not just Afghanistan but all of South Asia as well as parts of China. The new entity would be called Wilayat Khorasan, more commonly known as Islamic State-Khorasan in the West. It is more disordered than the original Islamic State but is still deadly and effective. You can support Foreign Policy by becoming a subscriber. SUBSCRIBE TODAY Initially, the Islamic State sought to directly undermine the Taliban. On July 12, 2015, the Islamic State released a statement and then an article in their magazine, Dabiq, revealing that the founder of the Taliban, Mohammed Omar, was not only dead but had died years earlier. This embarrassing disclosure forced the Taliban to admit that Omar had, in fact, passed away. By orchestrating the narrative, the Islamic State exposed fractures within the Taliban. Akhtar Mansour succeeded Omar, but he was unable to quell internal dissent over his appointment, resulting in defections to Islamic State-Khorasan. When Mansour was killed in a U.S. drone strike on May 21, 2016, Mawlawi Haibatullah Akhundzada took over. However, he too could not stem the flow of support to Islamic State-Khorasan, which was not principally ideological but mostly over leadership, turf wars, and other funding streams through illicit activities like narcotics and money laundering. Think of a squabble between mafia groups or medieval barons. Islamic State-Khorasan has been primarily based in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar, a transit route of the lucrative drug trade, near Pakistan’s border. It has often collaborated with the Haqqani network in this clandestine enterprise. The head of the Haqqani network is Sirajuddin Haqqani, who is a proscribed terrorist. He also happens to be the Taliban’s second-in-command and has maintained very close ties to al Qaeda. Before Islamic State-Khorasan came on the scene, the Haqqani network pioneered the use of suicide bombings in Afghanistan and was responsible for killing and maiming thousands of U.S., coalition, and Afghan soldiers. Before Islamic State-Khorasan came on the scene, the Haqqani network pioneered the use of suicide bombings in Afghanistan. The Haqqani network also established close ties with Pakistan’s powerful yet notorious Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency, which provided weapons, training, and financial support. The ISI also provided shelter to much of the Taliban leadership that has now returned to Afghanistan, including the Quetta Shura faction. The primary reason the Haqqanis were able to endure for the last 20 years was because they benefited from safe havens within Pakistan that gave their fighters the ability to launch cross-border attacks and fall back when required. All this has created the idea that the Taliban and the Islamic State-Khorasan are at odds. The Biden administration in part depended on that, as it looked to the Taliban to provide security against possible Islamic State-Khorasan attacks on the evacuation. This was in practice, though there has, in fact, been a tactical and strategic convergence between the Islamic State-Khorasan and the Haqqanis, if not the entirety of the Taliban. The Taliban are comprised of several factions, each with their own leadership, structure, and control of Afghan territory. Principally, they share common enemies: the former Afghan government of Ashraf Ghani and the West, which once stood in their way but are now opting for a speedy exit from Afghanistan. On March 25, 2020, a Sikh gurdwara was attacked by suicide bombers and gunmen in Kabul; 25 people were killed in the coordinated assault. Islamic State-Khorasan Province claimed responsibility. Soon after, in a significant counterterrorism operation, Aslam Farooqi (aka Abdullah Orakzai), the Pakistani leader of the Islamic State-Khorasan Province, was arrested in Kandahar province by Afghanistan’s National Directorate of Security. Farooqi revealed that Islamic State-Khorasan had not only cooperated with the Haqqani network but also with the proscribed Pakistani terrorist outfits Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) and the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), the latter of which Farooqi was once part of. The LeT executed the synchronized 2008 Mumbai siege attacks that killed 166 people; and the JeM’s most infamous recruit was British Pakistani Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, one of the murderers of American journalist Daniel Pearl. There was a clear division in terrorist labor. Islamic State-Khorasan recruits would receive training at JeM camps in Pakistan. The LeT would take part in the reconnaissance of targets in Afghanistan to create social, economic, and political consequences. The Haqqani network, through their criminal resources, provided coordination and logistical planning. Islamic State-Khorasan Province would provide the cannon fodder while also taking overall responsibility for the attacks. On May 12, 2020, Islamic State-Khorasan gunmen strode into the Dasht-e-Barchi hospital in Kabul and attacked the maternity ward, which was supported by Doctors Without Borders, shooting hospital staff, women in labor, and newborn babies. The U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan Reconciliation, Zalmay Khalilzad, stated the Islamic State-Khorasan Province was responsible for the hospital attack. He did not blame the Taliban, which drew criticism across Afghanistan and speculation that Khalilzad was more concerned about preserving the Taliban’s image to maintain peace talks. READ MORE Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar What a Taliban Government Will Look Like Afghan Taliban fighters at Bakwah in the western province of Farah on Nov. 3, 2015. The Taliban Can—and Can’t—Be Trusted Another major attack was the bombing of the Sayed ul-Shuhada High School in Kabul on May 8, killing 90 people, mostly schoolgirls. Islamic State-Khorasan, like the Haqqani network and the entire Taliban, is deeply and violently misogynistic. The Haqqani network is a family-clan enterprise and consists of siblings, cousins, and other members through marriages. Another key member of the Haqqani network is Khalil Haqqani, regarded as the Taliban emissary to al Qaeda. Recently, Khalil Haqqani triumphantly strolled into Kabul as the Taliban’s head of security for the capital. In act of symbolic defiance, he carried with him an U.S.-made M4 rifle, with a protection detail wearing U.S. combat gear, all of which the Taliban had seized in recent weeks. Whichever faction was in charge of evacuation security should be asked why the perimeter was not properly controlled and why Taliban checkpoints that had stopped many Afghans from reaching the airport nevertheless failed to stop the attackers. The murky nature of Islamic State-Khorasan’s relationship with the Haqqani network as well as Pakistani terrorist groups presents a complex arrangement of tacit cooperation between several terrorist organizations. So do its intricate ties to the Pakistani military and intelligence community. That has dire implications for Afghan and global security, especially as Pakistan is so keen for the international community to recognize and legitimize the Taliban. Right now, Afghanistan is before the eyes of the world, but what happens after the West leaves? The airport and hotel attacks are only the beginning of Afghanistan’s nightmare. The Taliban will use the incident to further crack down on Afghan civilian freedoms under the guise of security. Although the Taliban will face criticism for not preventing the attack, to them the bigger prize is the West’s departure. For them, the death of innocent Afghans at the hands of the Islamic State-Khorasan is merely a strategic means to an end. Islamic State-Khorasan and the Taliban may resume their squabbles, but they also have more in common with each other than they have differences... |
Devgru:Did you read my post properly ![]() USA publicly warned of the impending attack by ISIS-K ISIS-K was identified as the threat The Taliban had checkpoints around the airport area to screen people ISIS-K and the Taliban have a loose connection through the haqqani network whose key member is now in charge of security in the new Taliban government. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4sfuPNkmfU The Taliban and ISIS-K are rivals but have some sort of "loose fragile understanding" |
thesicilian:Obviously they didn't read the story before commenting |
Devgru:1. There's a channel of communication between USA and the Taliban. There were (maybe still are) thousands of USA citizens in Afghanistan. When it comes to the safety of USA citizens they'll definitely share Intel. 2. Assuming (for the purpose of argument) but not conceding that they didn't share Intel, note that USA issued a public warning about the likelihood of a terrorist attack. The Taliban was aware but conveniently refrained from going after ISIS-K to stop the attack. They are therefore jointly culpable |
Great100000:Read the first line of your post. Needs modification |
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