Leaders, Ministers and Deputy Ministers (italicized and bold name indicates captured or killed by U.S.-coalition forces) | ||
---|---|---|
Name | Position | Situation |
Mullah Mohammed Omar | Emir of Afghanistan; Head of the Taliban Movement | At large |
Mullah Mohammad Rabbani | Chairman of the Ruling Council; Head of the Council of Ministers | Died in Pakistan of liver cancer, April 2001 |
Mullah Mohammad Hasan | First Deputy Council of Ministers | At large; spoke to Reuters by satellite telephone from an undisclosed location on May 4, 2003 [1] |
Mawlawi Abdul Kabir | Second Deputy Council of Ministers | ? |
Abdul Wakil Motawakil | Minister of Foreign affairs | ? |
Abdul Rahman Zahed | Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs | Allegedly created an impression that he entered Pakistan after the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, but had returned before the end of 2001 to his home village in Loghar province [1] |
Mullah Abdul Jalil | Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs | ? |
Mullah Ubaidullah Akhund | Minister of Defense | ? |
Mullah Abdul Razaq | Minister of Interior Affairs | Afghan forces captured Razaq while scouring a rugged mountainous region north of Kandahar, April 1, 2003 [1]. Razaq's son, Abdul, had been killed on September 5, 2002 as he tried to shoot President Hamid Karzai |
Mullah Khaksar | Deputy Minister of Interior Affairs | ? |
Mohammad Sharif | Deputy Minister of Interior Affairs | ? |
Qari Ahmadullah | Minister of Security (Intelligence) | Killed in late December, 2001 by a U.S bombing raid in the Paktia province [1] |
Mullah Nooruddin Turabi | Minister of Justice | Allegedly sheltered in Quetta by Pakistani officials by the end of 2001 [1] |
Qari Din Mohammad | Minister of Planning | ? |
Amir Khan Muttaqi | Minister of Culture & Information | Allegedly moved to Peshawar, Pakistan before the end of 2001 [1] |
Mullah Ghausuddin | Foreign Minister | Killed in a gun battle in Zabul province, May 27, 2003 [1] |
Mullah Abbas Akhund | Minister of Health | ? |
Sher Abbas Stanekzai | Deputy Minister of Health | ? |
Mullah Abdul Salam Haqqani | Minister of Education | ? |
Mullah Yar Mohammad | Minister of Communication | ? |
Alla Dad Tayeb | Deputy Minister of Communication | ? |
Alhaj Mullah Mohammad Isa Akhund | Minister of Mines and Industries | ? |
Mawlawi Mohammadullah Mati' | Minister of Public Works | ? |
Mawlawi Rostam Nuristani | Deputy Minister of Public Works | ? |
Hafez Mohibullah | Minister of Haj and Religious Affairs | ? |
Mawlawi Moslim Haqqani | First Deputy Council of Ministers | ? |
Mawlawi Abdul Raqib | First Deputy Council of Ministers | ? |
Mullah Mohammad Jan Akhund | Minister of Water and Electricity | ? |
Mawlawi Faiz Mohammad Faizan | Deputy Minister of Commerce | ? |
Mawlawi Abdul Hakim Monib | Deputy Minister of Frontier Affairs | ? |
Mawlawi Shahid Khel | Deputy Minister of Education | Captured in Afghanistan in early April 2003 [1] |
Sattar Sadozai | "A key intelligence official" | Captured in Afghanistan in early April 2003 [1] |
Zabihullah Zahid | Deputy Minister of Education | Arrested in Balkh province, Afghanistan in early August 2003 [1] |
Governors | ||
---|---|---|
Name | Position | Situation |
Mullah Niaz Mohammad | Governor of Kabul Province | ? |
Mawlawi Abdul Kabir | Governor of Nangrahar Province; Head of Eastern Zone; (also see above) | Allegedly moved to Peshawar, Pakistan before the end of 2001 [1] |
Mawlawi Khair Mohammad Khairkhwah | Governor of Herat Province | ? |
Mawlawi Nurullah Nuri | Governor of Balkh Province; Head of Northern Zone | ? |
Na'im Kucki | Governor of Bamian Province | ? |
Commander Bahsir Baghlani | Governor of Baghlan | ? |
Commander Arif Khan | Governor of Kunduz Province | ? |
Mawlawi Shariqullah Mohammadi | Governor of Khost Province | ? |
Mawlawi Ahmad Jan | Governor of Zabol Province | ? |
Mullah Dost Mohammad | Governor of Ghazni Province | ? |
Mullah Badar | Governor of Badghis Province | Captured by Afghan forces in the province of Badghis in early April 2003 [1] |
Other high ranking officials, ambassadors and envoys abroad | ||
---|---|---|
Name | Position | Situation |
Noor Mohammad Saqib | Chief Justice of the Supreme Court | Allegedly moved to Peshawar, Pakistan before the end of 2001 [1] |
Abdul Rahman Agha | Chief Justice of the Military Court | ? |
Mawlawi Mohammed Qalamuddin | Head of the Vice and Virtue Ministry | Allegedly captured April 17, 2003, in Logar province, Afghanistan [1] |
Sayed Mohammad Haqqani | Ambassador to Pakistan | ? |
Abdul Hakim Mujahid | Envoy to the United Nations | Arrived in Pakistan in early December 2001 [1] |
General Rahmatullah Safi | Envoy to Europe | ? |
Mahmoud Saikal | consul to Australia | ? |
Akhtar Mohammad Mansour | Head of Aviation | ? |
Mullah Hamidullah | Head of Ariana Afghan Airlines | ? |
Aljah Mullah Sadruddin | Mayor of Kabul City | ? |
Mawlawi Abdul Hai Motma'in | Spokesman in Kandahar | ? |
Toorak Agha | Ex-Governor of Paktia Province | ? |
Mullah Baradar | ? | ? |
Field commanders | ||
Name | Position | Situation |
Mullah Fazel Mohammad Mazloom | Chief of Staff | Released by Abdul Rashid Dostam in November 2001 after fighting near Kunduz, and disappeared [1] |
Mawlawi Dadullah | ? | Escaped from the siege of Kunduz in November 2001 and reached Kandahar. Took part in the evacuation of Qandahar, then may have returned to his native town Kajai in Helmand province [1]; allegedly participated (by giving orders via cell phone) in the murder of Ricardo Munguia on March 27, 2003 [1] |
Mawlawi Nanai | ? | ? |
Mullah Ahmadullah | ? | ? |
Mawlawi Habibullah Ershad | Commander of Shamali front | ? |
Abdul Razaq Nafez | ? | Released by Abdul Rashid Dostam in November 2001 after fighting near Kunduz and disappeared after fleeing to Kandahar [1] |
Juma Khan | Military commander | Captured by Afghan forces in the province of Badghis in early April 2003 [1] |
Other prominent Taliban members | ||
---|---|---|
Yasser Essam Hamdi | Another U.S. born Taliban member | Captured during the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, now held in a naval brig in Norfolk, Virginia |
David Hicks | The "Australian Taliban" | Captured during the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan |
John Walker Lindh | The "American Taliban" | Captured during the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, now serving 20 years in prison in the United States |