Islamabad, Dec 13: Slain Afghan Taliban chief Mullah Akhtar Mansour purchased a life insurance policy using a fake identity in Pakistan and paid Rs 3 lakh in premium before being killed in a US drone attack, according to a media report on Sunday.
Mansour, who was killed in a US drone strike along the Pakistan-Iran border on May 21, 2016, assumed the leadership of the Taliban in July 2015, replacing its founder and the one-eyed reclusive long-time spiritual head Mullah Mohammad Omar who died in 2013. The details about the insurance policy were revealed during the hearing of a terror funding case against him and his absconding accomplices on Saturday.
The insurance company provided this information to an Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) in Karachi during the hearing of the case registered against Mansour and his accomplices by the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) last year, Dawn news reported.
It emerged during the investigation that the Taliban leader and his accomplices were involved in generating funds for terrorist activities through the purchase of properties on the basis of “forged identities”.
He had purchased five properties including plots and houses, estimated to be valued at Rs 32 million (USD 1,99,812) in Karachi.
The report said that it surfaced during the investigation that Mullah Akhtar Mansour had purchased the “life insurance” policy by using a fake identity and had paid up to Rs 300,000 to the company before his death in the drone attack on May 21, 2016. (PTI)