The Jerusalem Post

Pakistan clerics issue fatwa against suicide bombings

- • By DRAZEN JORGIC

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – More than 1,800 Pakistani clerics have issued an Islamic directive, or fatwa, forbidding suicide bombings, in a book unveiled by the government on Tuesday.

For years, the South Asian nation has been plagued by violence by terrorists, who often use suicide bombers and preach that their struggle is a holy war to impose Islamic rule.

Suicide attacks are frequently condemned as fanatical and immoral, especially when civilians are killed, but insurgents view the tactic as their most effective weapon.

Seeking to curb terrorism that has resulted in tens of thousands of casualties since the early 2000s, the clerics declared suicide bombings to be forbidden, or “haraam.”

“This fatwa provides a strong base for the stability of a moderate Islamic society,” Pakistan President Mamnoon Hussain wrote in the book, prepared by the state-run Internatio­nal Islamic University and released at an official ceremony. “We can seek guidance from this fatwa for building a national narrative in order to curb extremism, in keeping with the golden principles of Islam.”

Foreign and domestic critics of Pakistan’s government and military accuse them of cozying up to radical groups for political and military purposes and say the state has turned a blind eye to hate preachers in mosques for too long.

The fatwa was ratified by a number of prominent clerics who are outspoken critics of liberalism and the West, and are seen as controvers­ial for preaching sectariani­sm or supporting the Afghan Taliban.

One of the clerics who signed, Muhammad Ahmed Ludhianvi, is the face of a banned sectarian organizati­on, Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamat, and has been placed on a Pakistani legislativ­e list of individual­s with suspected links to terrorism.

The Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamat figurehead, Aurangzeb Farooqi, attended the signing ceremony.

Another signatory, Hamid-ul-Haq, is the son of a cleric widely regarded as the “Father of the Afghan Taliban” after many prominent terrorists, including Taliban founder Mullah Muhammad Omar, were found to have graduated from his seminary in the northweste­rn city of Peshawar.

Pakistani officials deny frequent US allegation­s about collaborat­ing with Islamist proxies in Afghanista­n and India, and say vast gains have been made over the past decade against terrorist outfits such as the Pakistani Taliban.

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