US Forces confirmed Monday they had killed a top Islamic State commander in Afghanistan in an airstrike, describing the leader as "key" to foreign fighters entering the country's north. Qari Hikmatullah - also spelled Hekmat - and his bodyguard were killed in the northern province of Faryab on Thursday, US Forces-Afghanistan said in a statement.
The airstrike happened in Bal Chiragh district, the statement said. That borders Darzab district in Jowzjan province, which Afghan officials on Saturday had given as the location of the airstrike. Some had also said the incident happened on Friday. Hikmatullah was a "native Uzbek" who previously belonged to other militant groups, including the Taliban, before joining IS's local franchise in northern Afghanistan, US Forces said.
The group has established a stronghold in Jowzjan after coming under intense pressure in the eastern province of Nangarhar. Afghanistan's defence ministry said on Saturday that Hikmatullah was involved in or responsible for "deadly terrorist attacks" and had been replaced by Mawlawi Habib-ul-Rahman. General John Nicholson, the top US commander in Afghanistan, vowed to kill "any successors" to Hikmatullah, adding that IS would be "eliminated".
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