The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Pakistan buries ‘Father of Taliban’ as PM orders probe on killing

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AKORA KHATTAK , Pakistan: A key Pakistani cleric with close ties to the Afghan Taliban who was killed in the garrison city of Rawalpindi was buried Saturday as Prime Minister Imran Khan called for an investigat­ion into the murder.

Maulana Sami Ul-Haq, dubbed the ‘Father of the Taliban’, was stabbed to death by unknown intruders at his residence Friday night.

The cleric, who is in his 80s was buried in his hometown Akoda Khattak, around 115 kilometres northwest of Islamabad.

Thousands of people gathered for the funeral prayers guarded by dozens of police personnel while a bomb disposal squad cleared the graveyard before the cleric’s body was brought for burial, an AFP reporter at the site said.

His seminary had produced some of the key leaders of the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban, something that the cleric and his associates would proudly tell visiting journalist­s.

The list of graduates written on the walls of the seminary includes the names of leaders of the Pakistani Taliban.

An investigat­ion into the murder of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto in 2010 revealed that the assassins had stayed at his seminary before travelling to Rawalpindi where Bhutto was killed.

The Afghan Taliban issued a statement terming his death ‘a great loss for the entire Islamic Ummah’ (nation).

“He rendered unforgetta­ble services and assistance to the oppressed Afghan nation against the Soviet and American invasions,” the statement said.

Afghan envoys in Pakistan had reached out to him seeking his help in starting negotiatio­ns with the Afghan Taliban. But analysts doubted if he had any sway with them.

“He did not had any influence on the Afghan Taliban but he supported their cause,” analyst Rahimullah Yusufzai told AFP.

“Many of the leaders and fighters of the Afghan Taliban had studied at his madrassa,” he said.

Pakistani media termed his death a blow to the Afghan peace process but Yusufzai doubted it, saying his death would have no impact on the talks as he was never part of any negotiatio­ns.

Social media users in Afghanista­n termed him a ‘troublemak­er’.

“The Taliban have lost their father, now they are orphan,” Bilal Noori, an Afghan, posted on Facebook.

His death was widely condemned in Pakistan by politician­s and religious leaders, with the prime minister calling for an investigat­ion into the murder. — AFP

 ??  ?? Pakistani supporters gather around an ambulance carrying the body of a key cleric Maulana during his funeral ceremony in his hometown of Akora Khattak, located around 115 kilometres northwest of Islamabad. — AFP photo
Pakistani supporters gather around an ambulance carrying the body of a key cleric Maulana during his funeral ceremony in his hometown of Akora Khattak, located around 115 kilometres northwest of Islamabad. — AFP photo

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