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*In [[Mazari Sharif]], [[Afghanistan]] faction leader [[Gulbuddin Hekmatyar]] joined the anti-[[Taliban]] [[Afghan Northern Alliance]] formed by ousted president [[Burhanuddin Rabbani]] and northern militia leader General [[Abdul Rashid Dostum]].
*In [[Mazari Sharif]], [[Afghanistan]] faction leader [[Gulbuddin Hekmatyar]] joined the anti-[[Taliban]] [[Afghan Northern Alliance]] formed by ousted president [[Burhanuddin Rabbani]] and northern militia leader General [[Abdul Rashid Dostum]].
*In [[Kabul]], [[Afghanistan]], [[Radio Shariat]] (Radio Islamic Law) announced that women should be covered from head to foot.
*In [[Kabul]], [[Afghanistan]], [[Radio Shariat]] (Radio Islamic Law) announced that women should be covered from head to foot.

Briana Alcantara of the united states, was born!:)<3333333


==[[December 5]], [[1996]]==
==[[December 5]], [[1996]]==

Revision as of 22:59, 10 December 2009

See also: 1995 in Afghanistan, other events of 1996, and 1997 in Afghanistan.


  • About 1,000 Muslim clergymen elect Taliban leader Mohammed Omar as amir al-momineen (commander of the faithful), denouncing Rabbani as unfit to lead the Islamic nation.
  • Hekmatyar, whose Hezb-i-Islami forces have bombarded the government in Kabul until driven from their positions by the Taliban, is sworn in again as prime minister. He immediately attempts to open contacts with northern Afghanistan's powerful warlord, General Dostum. From his power base in Mazari Sharif, Dostum continues to control a virtually independent northern Afghanistan. On July 3 President Rabbani names a 10-man cabinet under Prime Minister Hekmatyar. Foreign minister: Abdul Rahim Ghafoorzai; defense: Waheedullah Sabawoon; finance: Abdul Hadi Arghandiwal; interior: Mohammad Younus Qanuni.
  • The Taliban launch a rapid offensive in eastern Afghanistan. Their forces capture the city of Jalalabad, together with important areas in Nangarhar and Laghman provinces. With these territorial advances most of Afghanistan's traditionally Pashtun homelands are united under Taliban control. The gains include Kabul's main road to Pakistan and seal the fate of Rabbani's mostly Tajik government.