DUSHANBE, January 25, 2015, Asia-Plus -- Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has promised to "bury" the Islamic State (IS) terrorist group, whose local offshoot has clashed with government forces and Taliban fighters.
In a BBC interview, Mr. Ghani said IS was “not an Afghan phenomenon” and its atrocities had “alienated the people.”
“Afghans are now motivated by revenge,” he said. “They [IS] have confronted the wrong people.”
Mr. Ghani also called for anti-IS action at regional and international level.
“There is no denial that we are dealing with very significant risks,” he said, during a visit to the World Economic Forum in the Swiss ski resort of Davos.
“A lot of my diplomacy has been to create the regional consensus, and a region with the inheritance of previous animosities and short-sighted behavior is something that is going to require effort and focus.”
The US state department said last week that it had designated the IS offshoot in Afghanistan as a terrorist organization.
It said the group had formed in January last year and was made up of former members of the Pakistani Taliban and Afghan Taliban.
Afghan security forces have struggled to contain militant groups in the country - in December, the Taliban seized much of the strategic town of Sangin, and in September they briefly overran the northern Afghan city of Kunduz in one of their biggest victories since 2001.
However, the Taliban''s rivalry with the Islamic State group for dominance has also limited IS''s influence in the region. The Taliban say they have set up a “special forces” unit with more than 1,000 fighters that aims to crush IS.
In other comments, Mr. Ghani warned that if peace talks with the Taliban did not start by April the conflict would intensify, with consequences across the region.
“Time is not a friend,” he said. “We all understand that February and March are crucial.”
The Afghan president said observers should understand that the war in his country was “just one component” of a wider war that also encompassed Pakistan.
“The problems... are interrelated [and] cannot be solved by use of force in one country.
He suggested Pakistan should take action against Taliban groups that did not agree to talks.
“We need to see that we have common interests and we need to act together to preserve the state system and consolidate it,” he said.



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