An Afghan boy Najibullah, right, walks into the family home with his sister Basira, in the old part of Kabul, Afghanistan, Sunday, Nov. 13, 2011.
Musadeq Sadeq, Associated Press
KABUL, Afghanistan — Afghan forces arrested a man believed to be a prominent Taliban spokesman in eastern Afghanistan on Monday, government officials said. However, the spokesman said he was free and that the report was propaganda.
The arrest was announced as the Afghan government and the Taliban exchanged conflicting claims over the militants' alleged capture of key security plans, showing the increased importance of the propaganda side of the war.
Both sides want to show that they are on the verge of winning, ahead of scheduled withdrawals of NATO forces that could dramatically change the balance of power in the country and may have many Afghan powerbrokers rethinking their alignment.
The government said that it was confident that the man police arrested in Sar Hawza district of Paktika province was Zabiullah Mujahid, one of a handful of top spokesmen for the insurgent group.
"We strongly believe it's Zabiullah. Initial investigation shows he is Zabiullah Mujahid," Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqi said. Afghan police have handed the man over to the Afghan intelligence service for further investigation, he said.
The name Zabiullah Mujahid has been used by multiple Taliban spokesmen over the years, but for the past couple years there has been one primary "Zabiullah" who most commonly answers the phone number used by journalists.
The Associated Press reached this man Monday afternoon by phone and he said he had not been captured.
"It is the propaganda of the Afghan government," Mujahid said. "This morning I heard the media reports that I had been arrested. It is not true." He said he was talking from eastern Afghanistan.
A spokesman for the Paktika provincial government said there was an operation in Sar Hawza on Nov. 10 in which two people were captured. They were caught in a mountainous area with two motorcycles, some radio equipment and weapons, Mokhlis Afghan said.
"We are investigating. Is he Zabiullah Mujahid or not?" he said.
Paktika, which borders Pakistan, is a hotbed of the insurgency and a stronghold of the Haqqani network, a group affiliated with al-Qaida.
Meanwhile, Afghan security forces shot dead a would-be bomber outside the venue for a meeting of regional leaders and tribal powerbrokers starting in Kabul later this week, the interior ministry said. The man was carrying a bomb in a box, and was near the entrance to the site where the meeting will be held, but was shot before he was able to detonate the explosive, Sediqi said.
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