KABUL
(Reuters) - The head of Islamic State in Afghanistan, Abdul Hasib, was
killed in an operation on April 27 conducted jointly by Afghan and U.S.
Special Forces in the eastern province of Nangarhar, U.S. and Afghan
officials said on Sunday.
Hasib,
appointed last year after his predecessor Hafiz Saeed Khan died in a
U.S. drone strike, is believed to have ordered a series of high profile
attacks including one in March 8 on the main military hospital in Kabul,
a statement said.
Last
month, a Pentagon spokesman said Hasib had probably been killed during
the raid by U.S. and Afghan special forces in Nangarhar during which two
U.S. army Rangers were killed, but prior to Sunday's announcement there
had been no confirmation.
"This
successful joint operation is another important step in our relentless
campaign to defeat ISIS-K in 2017," the top U.S. commander in
Afghanistan, Gen. John Nicholson said in a statement from U.S. military
headquarters in Kabul.
The
statement, following an earlier announcement by Afghan President Ashraf
Ghani, said Hasib directed the March 8 attack on the main Kabul
military hospital by a group of militants disguised as doctors. Dozens
of medical staff and patients were killed in the attack.
It
said he also ordered fighters to behead local elders in front of their
families and kidnap women and girls to force them to marry ISIS
fighters.
The
local affiliate of Islamic State, sometimes known as Islamic State
Khorasan (ISIS-K), after an old name for the region that includes
Afghanistan, has been active since 2015, fighting both the Taliban as
well as Afghan and U.S. forces.
It
is believed to maintain links with the main Islamic State movement in
Iraq and Syria but has considerable operational independence.
U.S.
and Afghan special forces, backed by drone strikes and other air
support, have waged a series of operations against IS-K since March,
killing dozens of their fighters, mainly in Nangarhar, on the border
with Pakistan.
Defeating
the group remains one of the top U.S. priorities in Afghanistan and
last month the United States dropped its largest non-nuclear device on a
network of caves and tunnels used by ISIS in Nangarhar, killing 94
fighters, including four commanders.
The U.S. military statement said 35 Islamic State fighters and several high ranking commanders were killed in the April 27 raid.
Hundreds
of fighters had been killed or captured this year and the offensive was
continuing, with over half the districts controlled by ISIS-K retaken,
allowing residents in some places to return for the first time in two
years.
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