The commission includes Abdul Haq Wasiq, head of Taliban intelligence; Fasihuddin Fitrat, Chief of Army Staff; Shamsuddin Shariati, head of the Directorate for Monitoring and Follow-up of Decrees; Helmand Governor Amanuddin Mansour; and several other senior Taliban officials.
Ibrahim Sadr, deputy interior minister, and Economy Minister Din Mohammad Hanif are also members of the commission. The body held a meeting in Faizabad on Tuesday.
Ismail Ghaznavi, the Taliban governor of Badakhshan, is not a member of the commission. However, Amiri said its members had also met with the governor.
According to Amiri, the Taliban leader has tasked the commission with examining Badakhshan’s problems and submitting a report to Kandahar.
The Taliban official said all issues in the province, including disputes surrounding the mining sector, would be reviewed by the commission.
Intelligence Post Offered to Juma Khan Fateh
Amiri also told Afghanistan International that Juma Khan Fateh has been offered the leadership of an intelligence department branch in Kabul. According to Amiri, Fateh has accepted the proposal and is expected to move to the capital soon.
Fateh has not publicly commented on the offer.
The Taliban leader recently removed Juma Khan Fateh from his position as deputy governor of Zabul and appointed former Standards and Quality Administration chief Faizullah Tamim as his replacement.
The commission was formed following growing discontent in Badakhshan.
Local Taliban members have complained about the management of mining resources and what they describe as a reduction in their role in overseeing the province’s mineral wealth.
The creation of the commission suggests the Taliban leadership is still attempting to manage dissatisfaction among local commanders in Badakhshan through dialogue.
One of the clearest signs of internal tensions has been Juma Khan Fateh’s dissatisfaction with the Taliban’s policies in the province. He has reportedly opposed his reassignment to Zabul, the continuation of mining operations in the Darwaz region and the imprisonment of some of his associates.
Sources told Afghanistan International on Saturday that tensions among Taliban factions in Badakhshan had intensified and that the risk of an internal armed confrontation was increasing.
Several previous rounds of talks between Fateh and senior Taliban officials, including Army Chief Fasihuddin Fitrat, reportedly ended without a breakthrough.