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PAKISTAN: Schoolgirls Lured
To Suicide Bombing
July 18, 2008 - (IPS) "I was able to save my daughter from
becoming a suicide bomber. She had been lured by her teacher at
the religious school," said Jamilur Rehman, a Pakistani schoolteacher,
whose 13-year-old daughter was taken away by a Taliban group to
be trained as a suicide bomber in North Waziristan, a lawless
border area.
Rehman said that his daughter Sameena took religious lessons in
a seminary in Tank district of the North Western Frontier Province
(NWFP), where she was shown videos of the suicide bombing.
"She was motivated to the extent that she became ready to
be trained as a suicide bomber and destroy the enemies of Islam,"
he told IPS in a phone interview.
According to Sameena, she and another student, Mushtari Begum,
15, were handed over by her teacher to two men, but they were
seized by political authorities in the Mir Ali area of North Waziristan,
part of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) who handed
them over to the Tank police.
"The situation is extremely bad. We have saved the two girls
from becoming suicide bombers, but indications are that the trend
of women training as suicide bombers has gained currency,"
said police officer Ahmad Jamal, in Tank district, which adjoins
North Waziristan.
The FATA has been over-run by Pakistani Taliban groups that oppose
the so-called ‘war on terror’ unleashed by U.S. President
George W. Bush in the wake of the World Trade Center bombings
in September 2001. The Afghan and Pakistan Talibans are believed
to be behind the escalating violence and suicide attacks in Afghanistan
and FATA and the NWFP in Pakistan.
Intelligence agencies claim the FATA is a training ground for
suicide attackers. Haji Hussain Ahmed has been identified as running
one of the schools for bombers.
"We saw thousands of video clips in which the atrocities
of the U.S. forces against Muslims in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo
Bay had been shown. We were ready to act as suicide bombers, kill
pro-U.S. forces and win the blessings of god," Sameena spoke
to IPS.
Ashraf Ali who is an authority on the Taliban at the University
of Peshawar confirms the trend. "The Pakistani Taliban, impressed
by Iraq, where women suicide bombers have become an albatross
around the necks of the U.S. forces, are preparing a lot of women
suicide bombers to inflict more damages on the pro-U.S. forces
operating in Pakistan."
Not only in Tank, but about 25 girls from religious schools in
restive Swat district, NWFP, have gone missing during the month
of July.
"Two of my daughters, Bakhtshaida, 17, and Jamila, 18 went
to the Rehmania religious School on Jul. 2, but they didn’t
come back home. Her teachers have also expressed ignorance about
my daughters’ whereabouts," said schoolteacher Raham
Badshah. He has lodged a complaint with the police but in vain.
There have been 41 incidents of suicide attacks in Pakistan since
the start of the year. All the bombers were male from different
terrorist and sectarian groups operating in the country.
"But in none of these attacks were women used by the terrorists
as suicide bombers. Perhaps they did not consider women suitable
for their targets or their ability as suicide bombers was underestimated,
but now the Taliban have realised the use of women", says
researcher Ali.
It was on Dec. 4 last year that a female bomber, believed to be
Afghan, blew herself up at a checkpost in a high-security zone
housing intelligence services buildings and a Christian convent
school in Peshawar.
"This was the first suicide attack carried out by a woman
in Pakistan," Ali says.
In the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, while Palestinian women have
been among the ranks of fighters, the first to become a suicide
bomber was Wafa Idris, a 27-year-old ambulance worker, who killed
an Israeli civilian and wounded 140 in January 2002.
On July 3, as security forces launched an operation to flush out
militants from the Lal Masjid (red mosque) in Islamabad, the chief
cleric Maulana Abdul Qayyum told the media that suicide bombers
have been given the go ahead to find targets and strike wherever
they choose.
"The possibility of using women suicide bombers by terrorists
in Pakistan cannot be ruled out now," said Jamiluddin, a
teacher of political science at the Government College, Tank.
From:http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=43228
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