PUNJABI TALIBAN GIVE UP ‘ARMED STRUGGLE’
PESHAWAR / LAHORE: Maulana
Asmatullah Muawiya, head of the Tehreek-i-Taliban Punjab, said on Saturday that
his group had decided to abandon its armed struggle in this country and instead
would focus on “peaceful struggle” for the implementation of Sharia.
A statement purportedly issued by
the Punjabi Taliban to media quoted Maulana Muawiya as saying that jihad would
continue against the enemies of Islam. But it did not mention the region or
country where the group would carry on its struggle against what it called
anti-Islam forces.
“This decision was taken in the
interest of Islam and Pakistan,” the statement said.
It added that the group had taken
the decision after consultations with ulema and other elders and keeping in
view the prevailing situation in the country. “This decision was inevitable for
Islam and is in the interest of the people of Pakistan,” the statement quoted
Maulana Muawiya as saying.
The term “Punjabi Taliban” is
generally applied to distinguish Pakhtun and Afghan fighters from mainly
Punjab-based Deobandi militants who are, or once were, involved in sectarian
violence or focused on jihad in India-held Kashmir. According to analysts,
sometimes the term is also loosely used to include the Urdu-speaking, Kashmiri
and even Bengali fighters. Some groups which are part of the Tehreek-i-Taliban
Punjab are closely linked to Al Qaeda, they say.
The term was first used exclusively
for ethnic Punjabis associated with Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islam (HuJI), whose
leader Qari Saifullah Akhtar went to support Afghan Taliban leader Mullah
Omar’s government in Kabul during the mid-1990s. It, however, was used more commonly
after retired General Pervez Musharraf banned some militant and sectarian
groups which had a strong support base in Punjab. These factions had roots
largely in the southern and western districts of the province.
The action by the government forced
them to move to the tribal backyard of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to seek safe havens
and establish new camps. The Punjabi Taliban are mostly former students of
madressahs and maintain a political constituency across the country, according
to a security analyst.
Maulana Muawiya had renounced
violence a few months ago when the government started formal talks with the
outlawed Tehreek Taliban Pakistan (TTP).
The TTP criticised the statement of
Punjabi Taliban, declaring that he had been expelled from the group.
A native of Vehari, Muawiya is known
to have close relationship with Al Qaeda and is considered an influential
militant leader. Credited with the establishment of the TTP in Punjab, he is
said to have remained a member of the Sipah-i-Sahaba Pakistan and to have taken
active part in the Kashmir and Afghanistan fighting as part of the
Jaish-i-Mohammad before founding his own militant group, Janood-i-Hafsa, after
the Musharraf government’s crackdown in Lal Masjid in July 2007.
Unlike other militant outfits, TT
Punjab, which has affiliation with the Sajna group, a breakaway faction of TTP,
had not been put on the list of proscribed organisations under the
Anti-Terrorism Act.
The Saturday statement appealed to
the government and militant outfits in Fata to come to the negotiating table,
try to realise the sensitivity of the situation and foil the “growing
conspiracies in our region”.
Asmatullah Muawiya called upon the
government to take immediate steps for the rehabilitation of displaced persons
in North Waziristan Agency and payment of adequate compensation.
He also appealed to the tribal
people who have taken refuge in Afghanistan in the wake of military operation
in the North Waziristan Agency to return home. He called upon the government at
the same time to facilitate their return.
Published in Dawn, September 14th ,
2014
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