Hakim Taniwal
Hakim Taniwal (Pashto: حکيم تڼيوال) was the Governor of Paktia province in Afghanistan until he was killed by a suicide bomber on 10 September 2006, at the age of 60.[1] Prior to his governorship of Paktia, Taniwal had governed the difficult province of Khost, near the border with Pakistan, where al-Qaeda had established training camps during the time of the Taliban and later took refuge in the Tora Bora mountains.
Hakim Taniwal | |
---|---|
Governor of Paktia Province, Afghanistan | |
In office 2005 – 10 September 2006 | |
Preceded by | Assadullah Wafa |
Succeeded by | Rahmatullah Rahmat |
Personal details | |
Born | March 1946 Hesarak, Tani, Khost |
Died | 10 September 2006 Gardez, Paktia, Afghanistan |
Taniwal was an Afghan exile in Australia with his family before returning to Afghanistan to take the governorship. Lacking the military background, and the associated questionable human rights record, of so many of the country's past and present politicians, Taniwal was considered an effective and honest administrator before his death. He brought Shaikh Zayed University to Khost and he signed the contract of Khost-Gardez Pass road for these religious people by his struggles.
See also
- List of Afghan Transitional Administration personnel
- List of Afghanistan Governors
- Assadullah Wafa
- Tani, Afghanistan
- Amb (princely state)
Sources and notes
- indystar.com sidebar Suicide bomber kills Afghan governor
Further reading
- abc.net.au article Assassination could destabilise east Afghanistan published 11 September 2006 "Governor Taniwal is the highest-ranking Afghan official to be killed since the Taliban insurgency began."