The answer you are looking for is "Taliban", but to call them a "reform movement" is a little disengenuous. They were (and continue to be) a regressivist Islamist political organization. The reforms that they were making were to revert to medieval-types of laws.
Wahhabi
deoband movement
In Afghanistan, approximately 99 percent of the population is Muslim, and of those 80-85% are Sunni Muslims. In Afghanistan, most Sunni Muslims belong to and follow the Hanafi school of teaching.
Sunni obviously. Original Khan who traces the bloodline to Afghanistan is 200% Hanafi Sunni.
The largest religious group in Afghanistan A+
There is no such thing as "the Sunni Movement". There is the Sunni Sect of Islam and there are numerous movements within Sunni Islam, but no movement so important that it has eclipsed all others.
The Muslims in Afghanistan are predominately Sunni Muslims
AFGHAN president Hamid karzai is Sunni
No, it's Kabul.
There is no such thing as "the Sunni Movement". There is the Sunni Sect of Islam and there are numerous movements within Sunni Islam, but no movement so important that it has eclipsed all others.
Yes, Saudi Arabia is predominantly Sunni Muslim, with the majority of its population adhering to the Hanbali school of Sunni Islam. The country follows a strict interpretation of Islamic law, known as Wahhabism, which is a conservative reform movement within Sunni Islam. This religious framework significantly influences Saudi society, law, and governance.
Sunni and sh'a