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Maqsood
Ahmed sat in a corner of a tent packed with parents praying for
news of their children trapped in the besieged Lal Masjid. An impoverished
farmer from northern Pakistan, he had been waiting for five days
to be reunited with his 12-year-old son, who lived in the seminary
at the mosque.
His
worst fears were realised as dawn broke on July 10, when loud explosions
were heard coming from the compound. "I know he'll be dead
by now," he said, holding back his tears. His son, Mansoor,
was among the scores of students held hostage by the militants inside
the Lal Masjid, or Red Mosque, in the centre of Islamabad. Only
a few madrassah students could be rescued by security forces when
they launched the final assault on Lal Masjid. Others, including
Mansoor, were still missing as the military, still engaged in gun
battles with militants, room by room, cleared the sprawling compound
by nightfall. The operation against Islamic militancy came at a
high cost: the loss of several innocent lives.
It
was the first time that Islamabad had ever seen such a pitched battle
being fought in the heart of the city. Heavy smoke drifted over
the mosque complex, only a few miles from the presidential palace
and the parliament building. Gunfire and explosions thundered across
the city as Operation Silence unfolded. At times it seemed as if
the entire complex was being flattened. Armed with machine guns,
rocket launchers and grenades, the militants held out against security
forces, who had laid siege to the complex since July 3.
President
Musharraf ordered his troops to enter the mosque after an emergency
meeting on July 9 and a final attempt to resolve the week-long stand-off
failed. The government had set several deadlines for surrender and
used scare tactics, including warning explosions and bursts of gunfire,
to weaken the resolve of the mosque's occupants. But the militants
refused to surrender.
Led
by the two brothers, Maulana Abdul Aziz and Maulana Abdul Rashid
Ghazi, the militants for the past six months, had challenged the
writ of the government by seeking to establish a Taliban-style rigid
Islamic Shariah system in the capital. The stand-off intensified
when the clerics established their own Islamic courts and their
supporters raided houses dragging out women who, they alleged, were
involved in prostitution. The situation came to a head last month
when they raided a massage parlour and abducted some half-dozen
Chinese women.
Moderate
Pakistanis had expressed frustration over the government's initial
reluctance to take action against the growing vigilantism. One of
the reasons for their inaction was the fear of collateral damage.
More than 4,000 female students, many as young as five years, lived
in the seminary and were used as human shields against the threat
of use of force by the government. The Lal Masjid administration
also threatened to launch suicide attacks if the government used
force. Many of the students at the country's largest female Islamic
seminary are the children or relatives of militants killed fighting
in Kashmir. Umm-e-Hassan, the head of Jamia Hafsa, boasted that
she had trained many of them to become suicide bombers.
The radical clerics are said to have close links with Al Qaeda and
Taliban militants operating from Pakistan's lawless tribal region
bordering Afghanistan. Ghazi had often boasted that he was a follower
of Osama bin Laden. And in 2004, he was detained by security forces
for his involvement in terrorist activities, but he was freed on
the intervention of a federal cabinet minister. The mosque had become
the centre of outlawed jihadi groups like Jaish-e-Mohammed, Harkat
ul Mujahideen and Harkat-e-Jihad-Islami, which had also been involved
in terrorist attacks in the country in recent years. Most of the
militants in Lal Masjid were well trained and had fought in Kashmir
and Afghanistan.
The
Lal Masjid movement was an extension of the growing religious extremism
creeping into the cities from the Frontier region. Ostensibly, the
clerics had developed a close nexus with Baitullah Mehsud, leader
of the Taliban militants in Waziristan, and Maulvi Faqir Mohammed
in Bajaur. They also had close links with Maulana Fazlullah, the
firebrand leader of the Tehreek-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM)
in the Malakand region. TNSM, which was banned by President Musharraf
in 2002, was founded by a pro-Taliban cleric, Sufi Mohammed, who
is presently serving a prison term. The leadership of the movement
has been assumed by his son-in-law Fazlullah, who rides a white
horse.
The
young cleric, also known as 'Mullah Radio' for his fiery speeches
delivered from an illegal FM radio station, has developed a large
following in the Pashtun areas bordering Afghanistan. He has established
a rigid Shariah rule in the area, banning TV and music. In one of
his speeches, the mullah warned women that their marriages would
be annulled if they did not force their husbands to grow beards.
Pakistani security officials said the movement presents the most
potent threat to national security as it has firmly developed into
a satellite of Al Qaeda. The group has been involved in several
attacks targeting Pakistani security forces. The deadliest of them
was carried out in November last year when 40 soldiers were killed
in a suicide attack on an army garrison in Dargai.
Fazlullah has declared "jihad" against the government
following the military operation against the Red Mosque. Last week,
his followers killed an army major and three other soldiers in a
suicide attack on an army convoy near Swat. It was the second such
attack on the security forces in a week. Pakistani security officials
warned that the government planned to extend the crackdown to other
parts of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), which has been
infested with militants who are being supported by the Taliban.
"We have to move swiftly and decisively, lest NWFP falls under
the aegis of Talibanisation," said a confidential report of
the interior ministry.
The
raid on Lal Masjid marked one of the biggest crackdowns on Islamic
militants since General Musharraf assumed power in a 1999 coup.
Following the September 11, 2001, attacks, the military ruler led
his country into an anti-terrorism alliance with the U.S. For long,
the Musharraf government had pursued a policy of appeasement towards
Islamists and tolerated the spread of militant Islam. The inaction
had emboldened the extremists, who tried to create a parallel hard-line
Islamic rule. But the Lal Masjid operation has changed the situation.
The confrontation with radical Islamists can no longer be avoided.
As one analyst remarked, it was a defining moment for both the country
and the nation in the battle against militancy and religious extremism.
There is no going back for Musharraf.
Public
opinion is divided over the military action. The majority of Pakistanis
supported Musharraf's action. The Talibanisation movement launched
by the Lal Masjid clerics did not elicit much public sympathy because
of the manner in which they occupied the mosque and used it for
their own objectives.
While the action has
won Musharraf plaudits from moderate Pakistanis and western countries
who, in the recent past, had expressed frustration over his government's
inaction, it also intensified the general's confrontation with the
Islamists. The latest encounter adds to the list of political challenges
that President Musharraf faces as he seeks election for another
five-year term in October. The judicial crisis triggered by his
removal of the chief justice has remained unresolved. Lawyers and
citizen groups who are opposed to the ouster of Justice Iftikhar
Muhammed Chaudhry have continued their anti-government protests.
Speculation regarding the high death toll of women and young men
in the Lal Masjid operation is developing into a highly explosive
political issue for Musharraf's government. The casualties could
further turn public opinion against the military ruler. Pakistani
officials maintain that they did everything in their power to avoid
a bloodbath that they feared would bring worldwide condemnation
of President Musharraf's embattled administration. It is still not
clear how many non-combatants were being held hostage or used as
human shields. Last week, several of those who left the mosque,
including young women, said that their colleagues were there of
their own free will and were prepared to die.
The casualty figures have provided the Islamists with an important
tool to mobilise anti-government sentiments. Tension is particularly
heightened in the troubled NWFP from where most of the mosque's
seminary students were enrolled. The backlash would also test Musharraf's
resolve to fight extremism. The Lal Majid crisis has sharpened the
ideological polarisation in the country and has drawn a battle line
between the extremist and liberal forces. The battle for the soul
of Pakistan is far from over.
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