Los Angeles Times

Pakistan’s ‘father of Taliban’ killed

Scores of the cleric’s supporters riot after the attack at his home.

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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Prominent Pakistani cleric Maulana Sami ul-Haq, also known as the “father of the Taliban,” was killed in a knife attack at his home in the garrison city of Rawalpindi on Friday, his family and police said.

Haq’s son, Hamidul Haq, said his father was alone in his bedroom when he was attacked by an assailant, who escaped undetected.

“My father has been martyred. He was alone at his home. His guard had gone out minutes before the attack and upon his return he saw my father in critical condition,” he told reporters.

Police say Haq, 81, was taken to a nearby hospital, where he died.

Yousaf Shah, Haq’s spokesman, told the Associated Press that neither the attacker nor the motive was known.

Soon after his death, scores of Haq’s supporters rioted, damaging shops and vehicles in Islamabad and Rawalpindi. Haq’s family urged his followers to remain peaceful.

A well-known religious scholar with a large following among radical Islamists, Haq was the head of his faction of the Jamiat-e-Ulema Islam party.

He was a revered teacher with vast influence over Pakistan and Afghanista­n’s Taliban, many of whose leaders and commanders studied a strict interpreta­tion of Islam at his Haqqani seminary, earning him the “father of the Taliban” title.

Sirajuddin Haqqani, the deputy leader of the Haqqani network, a U.S.designated terrorist organizati­on, was one of dozens of Taliban leaders who graduated from Haq’s seminary, located in the conservati­ve Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province on the border with Afghanista­n.

In recent weeks, dozens of Afghan clerics had pressed Haq to use his influence with Afghanista­n’s Taliban to plot a path to peace that would end the 17-yearlong war there.

Pakistan’s President Arif Alvi and Prime Minister Imran Khan condemned Haq’s killing.

“We lost a great scholar and religious leader today,” said Khan in a statement from China, where he was on an official visit.

Khan was widely criticized for embracing Haq before Pakistan’s July elections, which put the former cricketer-turned-politician in power. Khan’s provincial government in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a donated millions of dollars to Haq’s hard-line seminary. He defended the move, saying he wanted to see Pakistan’s thousands of madrassas, or religious schools, broaden their curriculum.

 ?? Aamir Qureshi AFP/Getty Images ?? MOURNERS and officials move Maulana Sami ulHaq’s body from a hospital in Rawalpindi, Pakistan.
Aamir Qureshi AFP/Getty Images MOURNERS and officials move Maulana Sami ulHaq’s body from a hospital in Rawalpindi, Pakistan.

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