Rare new picture surfaces of Taliban founder Mullah Omar

Published October 12, 2015
This handout photograph taken in 1978 and obtained from the Afghan Taliban on October 12, 2015 shows the late Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar posing for a portrait when he was a student at a madrassa in Kandahar. -AFP
This handout photograph taken in 1978 and obtained from the Afghan Taliban on October 12, 2015 shows the late Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar posing for a portrait when he was a student at a madrassa in Kandahar. -AFP

KABUL: The Afghan Taliban have released a striking new picture of late founder Mullah Omar from his days as a religious student, the only known image of the reclusive leader before he lost his right eye in battle.

The picture, taken in 1978, was first posted on the Taliban's official site.

A clearer scanned copy obtained by AFP on Monday shows a youthful, thickly-bearded Omar wearing a green turban and a waistcoat over his traditional Afghan tunic, as he stares directly into the camera.

A senior Taliban official who sent AFP the picture said it was originally a black-and-white image that was later colourised.

The life and death of Omar remain shrouded in mystery and the new image may be one of only two verified photographs.

“The picture was taken while Mullah Omar was a student at a madrassa in Kandahar,” the official said.

According to an official biography he was born around 1960 to a humble family in the southern Afghan province of Kandahar.

He fought with the Afghan mujahideen against the occupying Soviet army in the 1980s and lost his right eye in battle, possibly to exploding shrapnel.

Taliban legend has it that he cut out the wounded eye himself, while more prosaic accounts say he was treated at a hospital in Pakistan.

After the Soviets pulled out in 1989 he returned to his native area as a prayer leader and teacher, attracting a band of students which later became the Taliban.

Under Omar's leadership they took power in Kabul in 1996 but were toppled by a US-led invasion in 2001.

Omar remained a unifying force during the Taliban's insurgency against the Afghan government and foreign troops. His death in 2013 death, reportedly due to illness, was covered up by the insurgents until July this year.

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