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Afghan government ministry responsible for interior affairs matters From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Ministry of Interior Affairs (Persian: وزارت امور داخله افغانستان, Pashto: د افغانستان د کورنیو چارو وزارت) is the cabinet ministry of Afghanistan responsible for law enforcement, civil order and fighting crime. The ministry's headquarters is located in Kabul.
Government agency overview | |
---|---|
Jurisdiction | Government of Afghanistan |
Headquarters | Kabul 34°34′04.13″N 69°10′42.82″E |
Motto | Resolute. Ready. Responsive. |
Minister responsible | |
Deputy Ministers responsible | |
Government agency executives | |
Website | moi |
The current minister of Interior Affairs is Sirajuddin Haqqani, who is also the first deputy leader of Afghanistan and the leader of the Haqqani network.
Portrait | Name | Took office | Left office | Political affiliation | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abd al-Ghafur Khan[3] | January 1929 | 1929 | Saqqawist | ||
Mohammad Gul Khan Momand | 1930s | Independent | |||
Faiz Mohammed | 1973 | 1975 | Independent | ||
Abdul Qadir Nuristani | 1975 | 28 April 1978 | Republican | ||
Nur Ahmed Nur[4] | 30 April 1978 | 11 July 1978 | PDPA–Parcham | ||
Mohammad Aslam Watanjar[5] | 11 July 1978 | 1 April 1979 | PDPA–Khalq | ||
Shir Jan Mazdooryar[6] | 1 April 1979 | 28 July 1979 | PDPA–Khalq | ||
Mohammad Aslam Watanjar[7] | 28 July 1979 | 19 September 1979 | PDPA–Khalq | ||
Vacant (19 September – 28 December 1979) | |||||
Sayed Mohammad Gulabzoy[8] | 28 December 1979 | 15 November 1988 | PDPA–Khalq | ||
Mohammad Aslam Watanjar[9] | 15 November 1988 | 6 March 1990 | PDPA–Khalq | ||
Raz Muhammad Paktin[10] | 6 March 1990 | 16 April 1992 | Homeland Party | ||
Abdul Samad Khaksar[a] | 1996 | 2001 | Taliban | ||
Qari Ahmadullah | 1996 | ? | Taliban | ||
Khairullah Khairkhwa | 1997 | 1998 | Taliban | ||
Abdur Razzaq | ? — May 2000 — ? | Taliban | |||
Yunus Qanuni | 7 December 2001 | 19 June 2002 | |||
Taj Mohammad Wardak | 19 June 2002 | 28 January 2003 | |||
Ali Jalali | 28 January 2003 | 27 September 2005[11] | Independent | ||
Zarar Ahmad Osmani[b] | 28 September 2005 | 11 October 2008 | |||
Mohammad Hanif Atmar | 11 October 2008 | July 2010 | Independent | ||
Bismillah Khan Mohammadi | July 2010 | September 2012 | Jamiat-e Islami | ||
Mujtaba Patang | 15 September 2012 | 22 July 2013 | Independent (Police) | ||
Mohammad Omar Daudzai | 1 September 2013 | 9 December 2014 | Independent | ||
Mohammad Ayub Salangi (acting) |
9 December 2014 | 27 January 2015 | Independent (Police) | ||
Nur ul-Haq Ulumi | 27 January 2015 | 24 February 2016 | Hezb-e Muttahed-e Melli | ||
Taj Mohammad Jahid | 24 February 2016 | 13 August 2017 | Jamiat-e Islami | ||
Wais Barmak | 13 August 2017 | 23 December 2018 | Independent | ||
Amrullah Saleh (acting) |
23 December 2018 | 19 January 2019 | Basej-e Milli | ||
Masoud Andrabi | 19 January 2019 | 19 March 2021 | |||
Hayatullah Hayat (acting) |
19 March 2021[13] | 19 June 2021 | Independent | ||
Abdul Sattar Mirzakwal (acting) |
19 June 2021[14] | 15 August 2021 | Independent (Military) | ||
Ibrahim Sadr (acting) |
24 August 2021 | 7 September 2021 | Taliban | ||
Sirajuddin Haqqani (acting) |
7 September 2021[15] | Incumbent | Taliban (Haqqani network) |
During the period where Afghanistan was a Marxist-Leninist state under the People’s Democratic People of Afghanistan, those that worked for the Ministry of Interior (MoI) were referred to as “Sarandoy”.[16] This label included traffic police, provinical officers and corrections/labor prison facility officers. The Ministry of Interior also had female personnel who were tasked with interacting with female civilians, such as when searching them at checkpoints. Those who worked for the Ministry of Interior were tasked with fighting “counter-revolutionaries”, securing government and party components and ensuring the safety of important structures. As of 1982, the Ministry of Interior may have had its own intelligence agency. The Sarandoy were a centrally commanded force and companies, battalions, and brigades reported to the “Directorate of the Defense of the Revolution of the Ministry of Interior”.
It should also be noted that a gendarme forces also existed during the monarchy and Daoud Khan’s republic, and that personnel under the Ministry of Interior were trained by Turkey from the 1950s well into the 1970s. Additionally, both West Germany and East Germany trained those in the Ministry of Interior and on the eve of the Saur Revolution in 1978, Afghanistan’s officer corps and MoI personnel contained personnel who received training in the United States. Regardless, the Sarandoy had far more numbers and were more effective due to the cooperation of the Soviet MVD and its “Kobalt” units in 1981 and 1982 where 12,000 of these Sarandoy personnel were trained at MVD facilities in the Soviet Union between 1978 and 1986, many of them being junior commanders and NCOs. 2,500 of these Sarandoy personnel would be trained in Tashkent, the capital of Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic for past excellence in combat.
During the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (1996–2001), Abdul Samad Khaksar (also referred to as Mohammad Khaksar in some news reports) was a Taliban deputy Minister of the Interior, who is notable because he offered to help the US deal with al-Qaeda and became an informant for the Northern Alliance. Khaksar was assassinated on January 14, 2006 by Taliban gunmen.[17][18]
Joint Task Force Guantanamo counterterrorism analysts described Khairullah Khairkhwa as a former Taliban Minister of the Interior.[dead link][19][20][21] However, during his second annual Administrative Review Board hearing Khairullah Khairkhwa disputed this allegation.
During the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan (2004–2021), the ministry maintained the Afghan National Police, the General Command of Police Special Units and the General Directorate of Prisons and Detention Centers (GDPDC).[23][24]
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