Kabul, Afghanistan - murder Berhanuddin Rabbani, the Afghan leader at the forefront of the reconciliation process has been designed outside the country of the Taliban, the Afghan intelligence official said Monday.
Rabbani, former Afghan President and the President of the Council of the Peace, died at home during the attack on September 20.
"We have arrested a person who is a citizen of Afghanistan," an official who requested anonymity, told reporters at a news conference. "But who are these people or the organization is involved in the attack, we say that in the future."
"We can not deny the involvement of the Quetta Shura," he said. Quetta Shura Council is a leadership based in the Pakistani city of Quetta, is suspected of driving much of the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan.
No Afghan government has played a role in the death of Rabbani said. "It was a terrorist act was carefully planned out of Afghanistan."
Rabbani's death shocked the country ravaged by war, undermines nascent peace initiative and fears fanned ethnic conflicts between Pashtuns and other new, like Rabbani Tajik ethnic group.
Afghan intelligence source told CNN last week that the bomber came to the house, at the same time, the meeting was to be held between the delegation representing Rabbani and Taliban insurgents.
Police said the attacker said he was a member of the Taliban who had arrived for talks on peace and reconciliation and detonated the explosives to enter the house.
Along the enemy of the Taliban, Rabbani was a questionable choice when appointed by President Hamid Karzai, President of the High Peace Council a year ago. He was forced to flee Kabul when the Taliban took over in 1996, but continued to lead the resistance to the system in his stronghold in Faizabad in northern Afghanistan
Rabbani, former Afghan President and the President of the Council of the Peace, died at home during the attack on September 20.
"We have arrested a person who is a citizen of Afghanistan," an official who requested anonymity, told reporters at a news conference. "But who are these people or the organization is involved in the attack, we say that in the future."
"We can not deny the involvement of the Quetta Shura," he said. Quetta Shura Council is a leadership based in the Pakistani city of Quetta, is suspected of driving much of the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan.
No Afghan government has played a role in the death of Rabbani said. "It was a terrorist act was carefully planned out of Afghanistan."
Rabbani's death shocked the country ravaged by war, undermines nascent peace initiative and fears fanned ethnic conflicts between Pashtuns and other new, like Rabbani Tajik ethnic group.
Afghan intelligence source told CNN last week that the bomber came to the house, at the same time, the meeting was to be held between the delegation representing Rabbani and Taliban insurgents.
Police said the attacker said he was a member of the Taliban who had arrived for talks on peace and reconciliation and detonated the explosives to enter the house.
Along the enemy of the Taliban, Rabbani was a questionable choice when appointed by President Hamid Karzai, President of the High Peace Council a year ago. He was forced to flee Kabul when the Taliban took over in 1996, but continued to lead the resistance to the system in his stronghold in Faizabad in northern Afghanistan