Taliban ‘resolve splits’ over Mullah Omar successor Mansour

A dispute that threatened to split the Afghan Taliban has been resolved after relatives of late leader Mullah Omar backed his successor, the group says.
A spokesman told the BBC that Omar’s eldest son and brother swore allegiance to Mullah Akhtar Mansour on Tuesday – and the movement was now united.The move consolidates the new leader’s place after weeks of uncertainty.
His swift appointment had angered some Taliban leaders after the group’s founder’s death was confirmed in July.
Mullah Omar’s family and a number of senior figures were against his successor and splits emerged into the open.
Who is Mullah Mansour?
•    Long seen as acting head of the Taliban, and close to its founder Mullah Omar
•    Born in the sixties, in Kandahar province, where he later served as shadow governor after the Taliban’s fall
•    Was civil aviation minister during the Taliban’s rule in Afghanistan
•    Had an active role in drug trafficking, according to the UN
•    Has clashed with Abdul Qayum Zakir, a senior military commander, amid a power struggle and differences over negotiations with the Afghan government
•    A man claiming to be Mansour met former Afghan President Hamid Karzai for peace talks in 2010 – but it later emerged he was an imposter
The Associated Press news agency reported that it had spoken to Mullah Manan and he confirmed that he and Mullah Yaqoub now supported Mullah Mansour.
The two men made their support conditional on the new leader accepting eight demands, giving them more say, an aide to Mullah Yaqoub told Reuters news agency. These included restructuring the leadership shura (council) and ruling by consensus.
“Mullah Mansour accepted all these demands,” the aide said.
Last month the Taliban admitted covering up Mullah Omar’s death for two years, for tactical reasons. Earlier this week his son said he had died of natural causes in Afghanistan, after contracting hepatitis C.
This conflicts with the account given by the Afghan government, which said Mullah Omar died in hospital in Karachi in 2013, despite Pakistani denials he was in the country.
The death disrupted fledgling peace talks between the Afghan government and the insurgents, but hopes for talks will rise if Mullah Mansour’s position is more secure. – BBC News