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Twenty-four-year-old
Siddiqullah had recently become engaged, with a wedding scheduled
soon thereafter, but he chose to cast aside marriage plans for the
forseeable future. Instead he proceeded to the war zones of Afghanistan
to join his ideological compatriots, the Taliban, who have recently
upped the anté once again with intensified attacks against
Afghan forces and members of the US-led coalition in the country.
Currently Siddiqullah's life comprises moving along with his comrades
through the areas rugged, often mountainous terrain, or from village
to village, sometimes walking for miles in the desert for days at
a stretch, or lying in wait by highways for targets to ambush. It
is a hit-and-run existence, and a dangerous one. But Siddiqullah
has no regrets. "My parents were insistent that I get married,
probably in the hope that this would deter me from going to Afghanistan,
but I told them that my first and last commitment is jihad, and
nothing can interfere with that at this stage," he says.
Hailing
from a small village bordering Pakistan, Siddiqullah was raised
in a religious environment, and had his schooling in one of the
locality's most conservative seminaries. He considers the years
of Taliban rule, when Shariah prevailed in Afghanistan, as the 'rightfold'
way of life and is outraged that the country has, post the US invasion,
reverted to its 'godless ways.'
"There was peace during Taliban rule. Even a feeble
old woman could walk the streets carrying kilos of gold with no
fear, but with the arrival of the infidel forces, not only has law
and order rapidly deteriorated, but women are no longer safe even
within the confines of their homes," he says. Presently operating
from a post near Kandahar, Siddiqullah maintains that resistance
is incumbent on all Muslims. "Jihad has been ordained for the
Ummah," he contends.
Siddiqullah
is one of hundreds, possibly thousands of youths from religious
schools across Pakistan who have joined the ranks of Taliban cadres
that have regrouped in Afghanistan in the last few months. According
to one estimate, at least 5,000 youths including former Taliban
soldiers who went underground after the fall of their regime in
December 2001, and students from religious seminaries from Balochistan,
have joined their compatriots in Afghanistan. Many of these young
men are known in the ranks as 'sarbaz' (those who have given their
lives to the cause and readily sacrifice them in suicide missions).
Regrouped, reorganised and rearmed, these warriors are now all set
to launch a new guerrilla war for as long as it takes to expel what
they call the 'infidel forces' from Afghanistan.
According to sources, there have been sporadic attacks against
coalition forces since the war began in Afghanistan, but earlier
these were on a limited scale. However, after the Taliban supremo
Mullah Omar gave a call a few months ago to some of his trusted
commanders who have so far escaped the coalition dragnet to reorganise
the movement and to launch fresh attacks against Afghan and US forces,
the limited strikes have acquired the dimensions of an uprising
that is creating serious problems for the new Afghan government
and the international troops.
Credible reports reveal that some months ago Mullah Omar
despatched the one-legged Afghan war veteran, Mullah Dadullah Kakar
and Maulvi Sadiq Hameed to Balochistan to launch a recruitment campaign
for jihad in the seminaries in the province, while Hafiz Majeed
was asked to garner the support of the tribal chieftains and elders
in southern Afghanistan. "Hafiz Majeed was chosen to approach
the tribal leaders because of his contacts in southern Afghanistan,
while Mullah Dadullah was sent to Pakistan because he is not only
widely respected by members of the Kakar tribe to which he belongs,
but also by many Pashtun youths because of his bravery and fighting
spirit," says a Taliban insider. According to him, Mullah Dadullah,
the most trusted of Mullah Omar's lieutenants and one of the Taliban's
chief training and recruiting officers, is a living legend, because
despite losing a leg during the war with the Russians and being
grievously wounded on several occasions, with the scars to show
for it, he retains the same zeal and vigour that he did as a young
man.
In the recent conflict, Dadullah continued to fight the international
forces in the country's southern Kunduz province even after the
Taliban government had fallen in December 2001. Thereafter however,
he escaped to Pakistan, where the Kakar tribesmen living in southern
Balochistan province gave him shelter. "During this period
he moved from one place to another, including the Kuchlak refugee
camp, and Pasheeen and Kila Saifullah districts in Balochistan.
The tribesmen not only provided him shelter, but also collected
donations which amounted to a sizeable sum, which they handed over
to him and, in addition, bought him a Land Cruiser," says a
source. Subsequently, when there was intimitation that he might
be arrested from one of his safe houses in Balochistan, they reportedly
shifted him to a house in Karachi's PIB colony - an area largely
populated by affluent Pathan businessmen.
In the last few months, accompanied by a few comrades from
Afghanistan, Dadullah has reportedly visited dozens of religious
schools in Pakistan's tribal areas and in some districts of Balochistan
with a mission to ignite religious fervour among the students and
induct them in the cause of jihad. Those who are convinced by his
argument and volunteer to join are provided information about how
to proceed to Afghanistan, whom to contact and the modus operandi
of the resistance. A Taliban insider disclosed, "In the past
two years Mullah Dadullah has made repeated trips to and from Afghanistan.
However, he has not been here since June because after the Taliban
stepped up their activities, Dadullah has personally been engaged
in fierce battles with Afghan forces in the Zabul province."
The Taliban militia emerged on the national scene in the
mid '90s from southern Afghanistan. Their main strength was young
students called 'talibs,' most of whom were the products of religious
seminaries run by fundamentalist clergymen. After two years of keeping
a relatively low profile, Mullah Omar has apparently decided to
tap this source once again to constitute a new Taliban force. Judging
by the numbers, it seems he has struck pay dirt. Hundreds of youths
have already crossed the border from Pakistan into Afghanistan,
and many others are raring to follow. Nineteen-year-old Abdul Samad,
is one of the young men. "I made up my mind to proceed for
jihad the day we received the letter telling us arrangements for
us to go to Afghanistan and launch our crusade had been firmed,
but I waited until I could purchase my own AK-47. Now I'm on my
way," he says. His interpretation of the jihad he is about
to embark on is interesting. "It is a fight ordained by God.
The more one contributes, the bigger his reward on the day of judgement."
Samad discloses that he had to sell his mother's jewellery and borrow
some money from his father to buy himself the assault rifle he was
coveting. "I told my parents that if I died fighting, they
too would be rewarded," he says, scratching his small beard.
According to reports, Mullah Omar has asked his 'recruiting
agents' to apply a new strategy for enlistment this time. His lieutenants
have been directed to personally meet students and directly exhort
them to join the mission. They have been emphatically told not to
enlist the services of either the principals of the madrassas or
the leaders of Pakistani religious parties for this purpose. "Mullah
Omar believes that most of these leaders are cowards, or have been
bought by US dollars and so cannot be trusted," says one of
his associates, who carries Mullah Omar's inspirational missils
to the students.
The Taliban leaders distrust of local leaders is based on
past experience. According to his close aides, when the Taliban
were retreating after the US launched air strikes in Afghanistan
in the wake of 9/11, Mullah Omar sent frantic appeals for help and
shelter to the leaders of assorted supposedly sympathetic parties
in Pakistan, but none of them came through saying it was too risky.
Mullah Omar was finally whisked away and provided sanctuary
by a few die-hard loyalists. "I don't know where he is exactly,
but I can tell you with certainty that he is residing in Afghanis-tan,"
says his uncle Mulla Wali Muhammad Akhwand, himself a religious
scholar presently residing in Pakistan's tribal areas.
Akhwand,
who still dons a black turban - a Taliban trademark - said according
to his information Omar initially found sanctuary in the deserts
of Helmand province in southern Afghanistan, but now shuttles around
between the desert belts of Helmand, Nimruz and Kandahar provinces
and the rugged mountains of Zabul, Paktia and Paktika provinces.
"In the Helmand and Nimruz deserts there are virtual mountains
of sand which make for good hiding places, and the rugged terrain
provides equally safe haven," he says.
Reports
emanating from Afghanistan reveal that since the new offensive was
launched by the Taliban, there has been a shortage of weapons in
the open market in the country. "Afghanistan has traditionally
been a source of supply of weapons for Pakistan. Now, ironically,
for the first time, many of those weapons sent across the border
to be marketed in Pakistan in the last few years are being ferried
back to Afghanistan and are fetching twice their usual price,"
says Haji Abdul Samad, a resident of one of Pakistan's tribal agencies.
He explained that it is not only the Taliban warriors who are aggressively
buying these weapons, but also many locals who were deweaponised
by the Taliban regime and now need them for protection due to the
worsening law and order situation in Afghanistan.
Just in the last few weeks, some 400 people, including over
100 members of the Taliban militia, many Afghan troops and civilians
have been killed in southern Afghanistan. At least 22 people, most
of them Afghan soldiers, were killed in one of these attacks a couple
of weeks ago in a police station in Paktika province. In another
incident, Taliban guerrillas attacked a police post of Afghan soldiers
in Logar province, killing 10, including police chief Abdul Khaliq.
However, the most devastating of these attacks occurred when, according
to some reports, some 400 Taliban militiamen took control of one
of the districts of Zabul province for a few hours, where they hoisted
the spartan white Taliban flag, and killed at least 29 Afghan soldiers.
The militiamen also announced from loud-speakers of local mosques
that henceforth Zabul's new governor would be Mulla Abdul Jabbar,
and anybody found cooperating with US forces or their 'puppet government'
would face grave consequences. Afghan government officials confirmed
reports of the Taliban militia having taken over some areas, but
played down the dimensions of the attack. Said Jan Mohammed, the
governor of Urzugan province, "It is true that some 400 members
of the Taliban militia attempted take over some areas, but we have
managed to push them back."
As a result of the fresh and increasingly organised resistance,
and its inability to cope with the situation, the Karzai government
decided to reshuffle some members of the administration. The governors
of Kandahar, Herat and Helmand provinces were replaced, and according
to some reports, more administrative changes are in the offing in
these areas.
According to observers, the Taliban resistance has met with
some measure of success for various reasons. Firstly, there is the
ethnic factor. The Taliban have launched their movement from the
Pashtun belts. Even apolitical Pashtuns are resentful of the current
situation because they feel their ethnic community is under-represented
in the Karzai government, even at the lower tiers. "It is impossible
for the Pashtuns to accept this dishonour," says Abdul Majeed,
a Pashtun talib. He points out that the Northern Alliance troops
are mostly Shia and were supporters of the Russians, while the Pashtuns
are staunch Sunnis. According to him the latter have merely been
biding their time and when the resistance becomes more organised,
they will amost certainly join hands with the Taliban.
Another factor that has lent impetus to the resistance is
the fact that following the war there has been a general breakdown
of law and order in the country, and local traders, who constitute
a large segment of the local population, have been hardest hit.
"They are compelled to pay sizeable amounts as extortion either
to the Taliban commanders or the warlords, or have been robbed by
the dacoits who now control many of the country's highways. Many
of those who have resisted, have been killed. There is a growing
feeling in the country that for all its downsides, the Taliban had
at least managed to control the law and order situation in the country.
Thirdly, due to assorted reasons, there has been virtually
no development work in the country's southern regions. There are
scant health or education facilities and even potable water is difficult
to access because of a paucity of wells. Many villagers have to
walk miles to fetch drinking water for their families. "We
supported the international coalition because we thought they would
change our lives, but so far nothing has changed," says a Mohammed
Hasan, a villager.
Fourthly, the movement has been able to take off in some
areas due to the fact that the Taliban can operate with relative
ease because of only a limited presence of US troops in southern
Afghanistan. There are some 15,000 US troops presently deployed
in Afghanistan, but the majority of them are stationed either in
Kabul, or guarding the frontiers in the northern areas. Others are
engaged in hunting down Al-Qaeda operatives. "Given the geography
of Afghanistan and the growing dimensions of the insurgency, 15,000
troops are negligible," says an observer.
Lastly there is the resurfacing of Mullah Omar, who has acquired
a virtual cult status not just in Taliban ranks, but gradually also
among other Pashtuns who are becoming increasingly restive with
the country's uncertain situation.
According to Mullah Omar's uncle Akhwand, Omar, an extremely
pious and fiercely honest man, engenders respect in every Afghan
mujahid. "Over the past two decades jihad has become a multi-billion
dollar enterprise, and during the Russsian invasion many religious
leaders and so-called mujahideen cashed in and became billionaires.
Omar on the other hand made not a single penny either during his
fight with the Russians, or later when he was made Amir-ul-Momineen
(Leader of the faithful)," says Akhwand. Mohammed Riaz, a former
Taliban warrior, corroborates Akhwand's contention, and further
contends, "Everyone talks about Osama bin Laden, but I can
tell you that Mullah Omar was the only person who could give him
orders, and argue with bin Laden."
Certainly, most followers of Mullah Omar, even those who
have not been in touch with him for a while, remain steadfastly
loyal to him. They recall his heroism against the Russians, how
he continued to fight despite the loss of a leg, heavy injuries
and even after he lost his right eye fighting in the Sangsar area.
In southen Afghanistan, two years after the Taliban were
dislodged, their fundamentalist ideology and associated lifestyle
is still very much in evidence. Most men sport the standard Taliban
black turbans, the few women visible are swathed from head to toe,
and there are no televisions, movie houses, or any other activities
that were frowned upon by the Taliban.
In dusty, desolate Kandahar a sense of fear prevails. The
roads are dilapidated beyond imagination, and the buildings are
in shambles, each pockmarked by bullets or damaged by US bombing.
Kandahar Governor, Yusaf Pashtun, blames opium, Taliban insurgents
from Pakistan, and decades of ineffective governments in Kabul for
the decay and the ongoing violence in the area. "Terrorist
activity has increased in the region because of the absence of a
government here for 20 years," he contends.
Few read newspapers in the remote areas of Afghanistan but
news, often distorted, spreads from one place to another like jungle
fire. Many Afghans relate with absolute conviction stories of persecution
of individuals across Afghanistan by members of the Northern Alliance,
and talk of how women are being raped in some villages. A middle-aged
tribesmen in a small cafe in Durra-e-Daum village in Kandahar province
tells me how three young Pashtun girls were recently raped by Northern
Alliance forces after they were kidnapped from their homes. Another
villager narrates how a local commander's nephew had a businessman
murdered after the latter refused to pay him extortion money. When
I ask them to provide me a few details about these cases, they are
unable to do so. Nonetheless they are certain the reports are factual,
and indignant because I have had the temerity to question them about
the veracity of the stories. "Do you think we are lying?"
one of them asks me aggressively.
Whatever the truth, dozens of similar stories continue to
do the rounds, engendering hatred against the present government
and the international coalition. Small wonder then that support
for the Taliban is once again on the rise with many locals clandestinely
assisting them in different ways
"Hundreds of elder tribesmen have volunteered their
youths to us," says 30-year-old Mohammed Amin, who is currently
heading a group of Taliban in the Pashmol district of Kandahar province.
"They include small children, some even under 12. Who will
suspect them of being informers? Many of them work as our lookouts,
and supply us important information. The transporters who ply the
highways are main source of information. They tell us about the
movement of government and foreign troops. Once we obtain these
details, we devise our strategy accordingly," he says.
Amin also discloses that many former Taliban soldiers and
their supporters have infiltrated the ranks of the present Afghan
army. "For us, they are like our 'moving bugging devices.'
They not merely provide information about troop movement, but also
attack and kill the troops whenever they get a chance," he
maintains. Amin refers to an incident three months ago at Mail Pull
checkpost near Spin Boldak, in which six soldiers loyal to former
Kandahar governor, Gul Agha, were gunned down by a Taliban soldier
who had managed to enlist in the Afghan army.
According
to Amin, at the moment the Taliban have a fighting strength of over
30,000, and many more are joining the ranks each day. However, for
security purposes, Amin discloses, the fighters do not move in packs,
or assemble in large concentrations at a time, being dispersed in
diferent provinces from Paktika to Paktia, Nangarhar to Kandahar
and from Helmand to Zabul to Uruzgan. "Usually about 20 of
them, each led by a commander, stay at one place," he says,
adding that the commander of each group is always in touch with
the chief commander of the area and constantly receives instructions
from him.
The fighters' modus operandi is simple. They emerge from
their hideouts after sunset and either wait along highways for the
jeep patrols of Afghan soldiers or ambush their outposts once the
soldiers are asleep. "We are always well-prepared before we
attack because our informants in the Afghan army have given us all
the necessary data, such as the number of soldiers at the outpost,
the amount of weaponry they possess, even their sleeping habits,"
says Amin. Most attacks are conducted at night. "Only suicide
missions are conducted by daylight," he discloses.
Interestingly, even this still relatively rag-tag assortment of
soldiers is impressively equipped with satellite phones and wireless
sets. Amin shows me his equipment and a hand-written letter bearing
Mullah Omar's signature addressed to the Taliban, referring to them
as 'brothers' and 'true soldiers of Islam.' The letter exhorts the
men to fight and release their people from the 'slavery of the infidel
US.' Amin says Mullah Omar writes two kinds of letters. "Some
of them are confidential, only for the eyes of the Taliban commanders;
the others are for the general cadres, which are read out to every
one," he says.
Twenty-eight-year-old Habibullah, who spent many years in refugee
camps in Pakistan and has now joined the militia adds that the Taliban
have now devised a secret code to communicate. "The code has
helped immeasurably in securing us and our operations," he
says. However, he is realistic about the Taliban's position. "We
have passion and guts, but know that we don't have the technology
available to withstand air strikes like the B-52 bombings. We could
probably even take Kabul, but we recognise our limitations, and
the fact that we probably wouldn't be able to hold it," he
acknowledges.
He adds, "What we are trying to do is to inflict maximum damage
on US troops and their allies so that they get fed up and leave
our country like the Russians, who only quit because of the long
and unyielding resistance by the Afghans. Once the Americans leave,
we will easily be able to take over."
While that may be an optimistic evaluation, only too real is the
fact that there is growing unrest in at least a dozen of the country's
31 provinces. And given the task ahead of the Karzai government,
these are not auspicious signals. The nation is to go to the ballot
for the first time in its history in June 2004. As per the proposed
schedule, Karazi must finish drafting a constitution, conduct a
census, register millions of voters, as well as lay down a blueprint
for universal education and equal rights for women, before the country
goes to the polls. A daunting task for even the most effective democratic
government, but for the shaky Afghan one, perhaps an impossible
one.

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