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Forty-two-year-old
Maulana Azam Tariq played with fire throughout his life. Because
of his virulently anti-Shia incendiary rhetoric, which he often
voiced from public platforms, his Sunni extremist followers dubbed
him "a man who could ignite fire in water." But it did
not end with inflammatory speeches: Tariq was also charged for involvement
in several sectarian murders which earned him two jail terms.
In
less than 10 years, Tariq went from being an ordinary worker to
the head of the rabidly anti-Shia Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP),
and in the process amassed a fanatical following.
"I
was just a madrassa student eight years ago when I first heard Azam
Tariq speak; it changed my life altogether," says Aurungzeb
Farooqui, now a central leader of the SSP, of which Tariq was the
leader until his death. He adds, "Like me there were hundreds
of students who came out of the madrassa that day raising slogans
against the 'infidels,'" - the derogatory word often used by
Sunni extremists for Shias.
Born to a poor farmer Mohammad Fateh and his peasant wife
in Chicha Watni, a small town in the Punjab, Azam Tariq was always
inclined towards religion. He studied at a local madrassa and then
enrolled in Pakistan's second largest seminary, the Jamia Uloom
Islamia Binori Town, in Karachi, to pursue his Islamic education.
This
was at a time when thousands of Pakistani mujahideen were heading
to Afghanistan to fight the Soviet invaders, and then military dictator,
Zia-ul-Haq, was pushing his Islamisation agenda for the country
forward with great zeal.
Binori Town was the headquarters of Sunni extremists of the
Deobandi order, who were trying not only to hoist the Islamic flag
in Afghanistan, but also to counter the increasing power of the
Shias in Pakistan which had been fuelled by the Islamic revolution
in Iran.
Cognitive of his abilities, clerics at Tariq's madrassa advised
him "to use [his] powers of speech as a weapon." He never
forgot the advice. During his stint in Binori Town, Tariq developed
the art of delivering firebrand sermons (khitabat), and then, like
other madrassa students, ventured to Afghanistan for jihad. There,
while his facility with weapons was found wanting, he further honed
his oratory skills in the war zones of the country, giving emotional,
inspirational speeches to motivate the 'holy' warriors.
On his return to Pakistan, he became the pesh imam of the
Masjid-e-Siddiq-e-Akbar in North Karachi, which the founding leaders
of the SSP, Haq Nawaz Jhangvi, and Zia-ur Rehman Farooqui, used
to frequent. Here they would scout for young men to recruit for
their cause, and once they set eyes on Azam Tariq they knew they
had a prime candidate.
Tariq officially joined the SSP in the '80s and soon, largely
by virtue of his powerful oratory, became a prominent leader of
the party. His diatribes against the Shia community went down well
with his ideological affiliates, particularly since sectarian tensions
in Karachi and elsewhere in the country were at an all-time high.
In 1990, when Haq Nawaz Jhangvi was assassinated by suspected
Shia militants in Jhang, Azam Tariq climbed another rung up the
ladder of the party's hierarchy, and became its central leader.
Thereafter, another chief of the SSP, Isar-ul Haq Qasmi, was killed
during a bye-election campaign in Jhang. The leader of the party
asked Azam Tariq not only to take his place in the party's headquarters
in Jhang, but also to contest the polls.
Since 1990, Tariq was elected as a member of the National
Assembly four times, twice while he was in prison on charges of
inciting and participating in violence.
As the SSP's murder index shot up, so too did Azam Tariq's
popularity graph in his party - and his vulnerability. "I have
lots of enemies," Azam Tariq would tell his colleagues. Now
he could only venture out with convoys of vehicles of armed men
accompanying him, and have a battalion of guards standing by as
he delivered speeches in cities, towns and villages across the country,
inciting his party workers to violence.
In
1993, Azam Tariq used derogatory words for Imam Mehdi, a revered
Shia figure, and photocopies of the speech in which these were contained
were circulated around the country. That may have made him more
popular in Sunni extremist circles, but prompted a series of attacks
on his life.
In 1996, a bomb attack by Shia militants in a Lahore court
killed 30 people, including SSP chief, Zia-ur Rehman Farooqui and
other party leaders. Mehrum Ali, said to be a member of a Shia militant
organisation, was sentenced to death on charges of masterminding
the attack. Azam Tariq was critically injured, but miraculously
survived.
Azam Tariq's escape earned him a badge of honour from his
party members. A few months later, a rocket was targeted at his
car while he was on his way to Jhang. Once again he survived. The
head of the rival Sipaha-e-Mohammad, Ghulam Reza Naqvi, was accused
of carrying out the attack and is still in prison.
The repeated attacks prompted increased security measures.
His corps of bodyguards grew and he would constantly change his
schedule and the vehicles he used to avoid being targeted. But ultimately,
he could not escape the death that lay in wait for him. He would
tell his party men, "If I am assassinated, take revenge by
fulfilling my ambition to make Pakistan a Sunni state." Given
the rumblings and the sporadic incidents of violence that have already
occurred, it seems his followers have not forgotten.
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