Rabbani and Hekmatyar President
Mohammad Najibullah, leader of the
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, was forced to resign on 15 April 1992. The
Peshawar Accord of 25 April 1992, which established a power-sharing interim government to take control of Kabul, was signed by six of the seven major Afghan anti-Soviet resistance parties (notably excluding the
Hezb-e Islami ["Islamic Party"] faction of
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a Pashtun, who refused to sign the Accord), and supported by some remnants of the Najibullah administration. An
Islamic state was proclaimed,
Islamic law introduced,
bars were closed, and women were ordered to wear the
hijab. In June,
Burhanuddin Rabbani, leader of the Tajik-dominated
Jamiat-e Islami ("Islamic Association") faction, was made interim-president of the new Islamic State of Afghanistan, and on 30 December 1992 he was elected head of the 7-member Government Council for a two-year term. However, Hekmatyar's Hezb-e Islami rebel faction (which had split from Jamiat-e Islami in 1976) demanded a share in power as well, and started clashing with Rabbani's troops. After months of fighting, they signed an agreement in March 1993 making Hekmatyar the Prime Minister of Afghanistan in June, and shortening Rabbani's presidency from 2 years to 1.5 year. Fighting between different rebel factions continued, however, and Kabul was largely destroyed.
Rise of the Taliban In late 1994, a new Pashtun-dominated Islamic fundamentalist militia called the
Taliban () managed to conquer large parts of southern Afghanistan with the support of Pakistan. Making steady gains throughout 1995 and 1996, the Taliban were able to seize control of the capital city of Kabul in September 1996, driving the Rabbani government and other factions northward, and by the end of the year occupying two-thirds of Afghanistan. Former president Najibullah was arrested and executed in public by hanging on 27 September 1996. The Taliban renamed the country the
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, and imposed an even more strict version of Sharia and
purdah on the population they controlled. This especially
negatively impacted women, who were forced to wear a
burqa, stay indoors and banned from working outside the house with rare exceptions. Almost all girls lost access to education, increasing illiteracy rates.
Movie theaters, soccer stadiums, and television stations were now closed as well.
Northern Alliance The ousted Rabbani government formed a political coalition with Tajik leader
Ahmed Shah Massoud, Uzbek warlord
Abdul Rashid Dostum, and the Shia
Hizb-i-Wahdat faction (dominated by Hazaras) of
Karim Khalili. Its formal name was United Islamic Front for the Salvation of Afghanistan, known in the
Western world as the
Northern Alliance, and its goal was to take back the country from the Taliban. By the end of May 1997, the Taliban offensive came to a halt due to a number of strategic victories by the Northern Alliance. International pressure forced both sides to negotiate, but the demands posed by either party were so high that the differences were irreconcilable, and a political impasse ensued. The country was in a dire state according to a 1997 United Nations report, which found that the
infant mortality rate was 25%, numerous civil casualties due to landmines, economic blockades imposed by the militias causing hunger, and international humanitarian organisations being unable to carry out their work. A February 1998 earthquake in northeastern Afghanistan killed 4,500 people. In the first half of 1998, the negotiations appeared to reach a peace settlement, but then the Northern Alliance fell apart. Taking advantage of the resistance factions' disunity the Taliban launched a campaign, rapidly conquering the provincial capital cities of
Maimana,
Sheberghan, and finally
Mazar-i-Sharif (8 August 1998). Taliban fighters committed a
massacre amongst the Shia population of the last city, also
killing eight Iranian diplomats and journalists. This aroused international outrage, and brought the Taliban regime on the brink of war with Iran. The Northern Alliance drove the Taliban away in December 2001, following the
United States invasion of Afghanistan. The Islamic State of Afghanistan was succeeded by the interim
Transitional Islamic State of Afghanistan in 2002. == Gallery ==