Los Angeles Times

Afghans join war effort — of Iran

Ethnic Hazaras flee their battle-scarred homeland, only to end up fighting in Syria.

- By Ramin Mostaghim and Nabih Bulos

QOM, Iran — Two men squatted before a freshly dug stretch of earth in a public cemetery here as traffic buzzed by on the adjacent highway.

They had just buried their 18-year-old brother, Seyyed Zia Hoseyni. His photograph poked out of a bundle of flowers.

Hoseyni joined hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Afghans who were killed in Syria after enlisting in Iran’s effort to bolster the embattled forces of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Nearly all are from Afghanista­n’s Hazara minority. As Shiite Muslims, they fled to Iran in hopes that it would be more hospitable than Afghanista­n, where they faced religious persecutio­n and the economic hardships of a country racked by war and terrorism.

But they wound up embroiled in another war. The Iranian government has relied heavily on the Afghan immigrants, sending them to battle in greater numbers than it does Iranians in the Revolution­ary Guard.

Hazara fighters can be found on the cobbleston­e walkways of the famed old quarter of Damascus. Busloads of them were visiting the shrine of Ruqayya, a Shiite holy site, while a reporter was there last year. The majority were on their way to heavy clashes in the northweste­rn province of Idlib.

Many Hazaras have few options but to enlist. Those caught sneaking across the Afghan-Iranian border are often presented with a stark choice: Go to jail and face deportatio­n, or fight in Syria for a few months and gain legal residence in Iran.

Other Hazaras, drawn by the pay or their religious and political beliefs, join the Fatemiyoun Division, an allAfghan Shiite militia named for the prophet Muhammad’s youngest daughter and trained by the Revolution­ary Guard.

Some of its original members are veterans of Afghanista­n’s brutal war against the Soviet occupation during the 1980s or Iran’s war against Iraq that same decade. Iranian news outlets say it has grown to 20,000 men.

“The presence of the Fatemiyoun Division in Syria conveys the message that geographic­al borders do not exist for the fighters of this unit, who assist whenever Shiite Muslims … are endangered — be it in Syria or Iraq,” the news agency Tasnim reported in June.

Gol-Mohammad Mohammadi, a 23-year-old Hazara who never learned to read and had been working as a constructi­on worker, said he joined the unit last year.

Once he signed on, he learned how to fire Kalashniko­v rifles, rocket-propelled grenades and other light weapons. The training lasted 25 days and was conducted at the Martyr Pazouki military base in the city of Qom, he said.

Shepherded by an officer from the Revolution­ary Guard, he and 15 other Afghans flew from Tehran’s Imam Khomeini Airport to Damascus, the Syrian capital. From there they headed to the ancient city of Palmyra, which was captured by Islamic State militants last year.

Mohammadi said he was part of a major offensive by pro-government forces, backed by Russian air power, that took back the city in March. He stayed in Syria for 54 days.

Back in Tehran on leave, he said he was “counting the days to go back to the battlefiel­d” and missed his fellow combatants there.

As a laborer, Mohammadi earned roughly $600 every two months. As a soldier in Syria, he made more than double that — about $1,500 for his deployment. He sent his pay to his sister and five brothers in central Afghanista­n.

Some of the fighters have criminal records and are paid only a subsistenc­e wage, several sources said. Those with better education or prior training can receive as much as $800 a month.

Mohammad Gholami, a worker in a shoe factory in Qom who is also studying law, said his cousin has earned good money fighting in Syria. He was recruited early this year in the eastern city of Mashhad.

“Because he had been already in Afghan army, he didn’t need training,” Gholami said. He said he has no desire to join the war and hopes to eventually return to Afghanista­n.

For many fighters, money is only part of the motivation. Another is religious fervor, a sense of taking part in a cataclysmi­c battle against Sunni Muslim extremists and defending Shiite holy sites in Syria.

“Hazara fight in Syria to defend the shrines of Sayyida Zainab and Ruqayya,” said Mohammad Amiri, a 45-year-old Afghan cleric living in Qom.

Sayyida Zainab, a mausoleum 10 miles from downtown Damascus, is a frequent target of Islamic State militants and other Sunni insurgents, who view Shiites as apostates who must be killed.

“We don’t care about Bashar Assad’s regime,” Amiri said. “We fight for the cause of the Shiites against Daesh” — an Arabic acronym for Islamic State.

Their participat­ion has exacerbate­d problems for the Hazaras back in Afghanista­n, who make up roughly 10% of the population and have long been oppressed. Last month, suicide bombers attacked a Hazara protest in Kabul, the Afghan capital, killing more than 80 people. Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity and said the operation was a response to Hazaras “killing the Sunnis in the land of Syria.”

In the Iranian media, both the Hazara and Iranians who die in Syria are revered as “defenders of the holy shrines.”

But some Hazaras feel marginaliz­ed in Iran. “Iranians see the Hazara as cannon fodder,” said Hassan, a 50-year-old sheik in Qom who refused to give his full name for fear of retributio­n.

The government, he said, feared the wrath of public opinion if Iranian fighters were killed in high numbers. If Iranians were captured, there would be pressure to release prisoners held by Iran in exchange.

“If the Hazara are the Muslim Shiite brethren of Iranians,” he said, “then why are they the least important people in the devastatin­g civil war in Syria?”

Hazaras who are killed in battle are buried in segregated areas of Iranian cemeteries.

Back at the grave of Hoseyni, one of his brothers choked up as he explained that the family was still waiting for answers about how he was killed.

“My parents are too sad to come and are mourning at home,” he said. “I’ll stay with the grave.”

Mostaghim and Bulos are special correspond­ents.

 ?? Jawad Jalali European Pressphoto Agency ?? HUNDREDS, perhaps thousands, of Afghans were killed in Syria after enlisting in Iran’s effort to bolster Syrian President Bashar Assad.
Jawad Jalali European Pressphoto Agency HUNDREDS, perhaps thousands, of Afghans were killed in Syria after enlisting in Iran’s effort to bolster Syrian President Bashar Assad.
 ?? Ramin Mostaghim For The Times ?? AFGHANS who enlisted in Iran include Gol-Mohammad Mohammadi.
Ramin Mostaghim For The Times AFGHANS who enlisted in Iran include Gol-Mohammad Mohammadi.

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