Kuwait Times

Young Pakistani’s Taleban idealism ends with death

-

PESHAWAR: The last time Abdul Rasheed’s family saw him alive was in May, when the young Pakistani left for Afghanista­n to fight for the Taleban. He returned home last week in a cardboard coffin.

The militant group is waging an offensive across Afghanista­n’s countrysid­e, snapping up territory and leaving the Afghan forces facing a crisis with the US and NATO all but gone. Many Pakistanis, inspired by religious faith or community pressure, have joined the fight across a border that doesn’t distinguis­h between the Pashtuns who live either side.

“Rasheed sacrificed his life for a great cause,” Rasheed’s uncle, Maroof Khan, a Muslim cleric, told AFP over the phone from his home on the outskirts of Peshawar, just a few hours from the Afghan border. Throngs of people visited to congratula­te the family after hearing news of the 22-year-old’s death.

“He went there with a spirit of jihad. Now his young friends want to be martyred like him,” Khan added. Pakistan’s interior minister earlier this month publicly acknowledg­ed that the families of Afghan Taleban fighters were living in the country’s capital, while members of its rank-and-file were brought to the country for medical treatment or to be buried.

Pakistan has a long, complicate­d history with the Taleban. Since fleeing the US invasion of Afghanista­n in 2001, the group’s leaders have been largely based in Pakistan, where they have been allowed to regroup, recruit and manage the insurgency from the safety of Pakistani cities. The issue is a particular­ly sensitive one for Islamabad, which has long been accused of supporting the hardline fundamenta­lists even while battling a Taleban offshoot within its own borders. The Afghan and US government­s have begged Islamabad to bring the leadership to heel and force the Taleban to hammer out a peace agreement.

‘University of Jihad’

The Taleban emerged in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar during the civil war that followed the Soviet withdrawal from the country. But its ranks were filled with tens of thousands of Afghan refugees who had fled to Pakistan. Some Pakistani nationals also joined.

Security analyst Tahir Khan told AFP that authoritie­s had more recently clamped down on people crossing to fight in Afghanista­n, but the porous border in the rugged countrysid­e meant some still made it. “The number of Taleban fighters from Pakistan is much lower than in the past,” Khan said.

“Now the Afghan Taleban are so numerous they don’t need fighters from Pakistan.” Many-including Rasheed-had graduated from Dar-ul-Uloom Haqqania madrassa near Peshawar, which was given the nickname the “University of Jihad” for its fiery ideology and the number of Taliban fighters it has produced.

For decades, Pakistani madrassas have served as incubators for militancy, indoctrina­ting tens of thousands of refugees who have few other options for education than the fire-breathing lectures from hardline clerics. Rather than crack down on the institutio­ns, successive government­s in Islamabad-who rely on the support of Islamist parties in coalition government­shave largely given the madrassas a free hand.

Taleban flags

Rasheed’s family do not know exactly when or where he died, only that it happened somewhere in eastern Nangarhar province. Two police sources in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province told AFP that at least four dead bodies of Pakistani fighters had arrived from Afghanista­n in recent weeks.

There were chaotic scenes in Rasheed’s hometown when his body was brought back. Video clips posted to social media and confirmed by his family showed hundreds of people clamouring to touch his coffin and chanting religious slogans, some waving Taleban flags. Khan, his uncle, was later arrested and handed a twoweek jail sentence. He was charged with organising an illegal gathering and propagatin­g terrorism, a police spokesman told AFP. As visitors continued to pay their respects this week, Rasheed’s father Nasir Khan sat on a traditiona­l wooden charpoy bench, wearing glasses along with a flowing white beard. “Rasheed was a bright student,” Nasir Khan said. “I pray that Allah accepts the martyrdom of my son.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait