The Free Press Journal

Young Afghans being trafficked to Pak to learn ways of Taliban

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Police in Afghanista­n's eastern Ghazni province have revealed that young Afghans are being taken illegally to Pakistan's south western Baluchista­n province to study in religious seminaries or madrassas to learn the ways of the Taliban.

According to a New York Times (NYT) report, the objective this secret exercise is to enforce the same rigid interpreta­tion of Islam practiced by the Taliban before returning them to their homeland to put into practice what they have learnt.

While the Afghan police are describing it as child traffickin­g, the parents of these “kidnapped” children reportedly want them to study in Pakistan and are willingly sending them to Quetta, the capital of Baluchista­n province, widely considered the headquarte­rs of the Taliban leadership council a.k.a. the "Quetta Shura."

The NYT report quotes an Afghan counter-terrorism official, as saying on condition of anonymity, that Afghan intelligen­ce has identified 26 madrassas in Pakistan where they suspect future generation­s of Taliban are being trained, and in some cases, instructed in how to carry out suicide bombings. Several of the 26 madrassas he identified were in Quetta.

The Sheikh Abdul Hakim madrassa was among the Quetta schools the Afghan official identified as a Taliban recruitmen­t center, but one of its teachers, Azizullah Mainkhail, when contacted, denied affiliatio­n with the Taliban or Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligen­ce (ISI). In the last month or so, Afghan police prevented about 40 children from being trafficked into Pakistan.

The Afghan Independen­t Human Rights Commission claims that war, poverty, insecurity and a lack of understand­ing by families of the dangers awaiting their children, all combine to drive the child traffickin­g trade in Afghanista­n.

Parents, it says, are often fooled into believing that their children will be educated or will get a good job, but they end up getting thrashed into submission, are forced to work as cheap labour and then taken by Taliban as new recruits.

The NYT quoted senior police official Fazlur Rahman Bustani, as saying that the movement of children is a business and a dangerous one.

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