Manish Sabharwal

The second secession


Manish Sabharwal

Pak Taliban introduces moral policing in parts of Afghanistan

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Taliban

The Pakistani Taliban have introduced "moral policing" in parts of northeastern Afghanistan in a bid to enforce their puritanical version of Islam, Afghan police officials have said.

Key leaders of the banned Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan – including its chieftains Maulana Fazlullah from Swat, Maulvi Faqir of Bajaur Agency and Abdul Wali of Mohmand Agency – and dozens of their fighters fled military operations in Pakistan and sought sanctuary in the Afghan provinces of Nuristan and Kunar.

They mounted sporadic cross-border attacks on Pakistani troops in Chitral and Dir districts of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.

Now, they have introduced "moral policing" on the pattern of the Taliban-era "Department for the Preservation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice" in Kamdesh district of Nuristan.

Armed vigilantes of the Pakistani Taliban roam the streets to stop what they believe are "un-Islamic" activities.

"Turbaned and bearded Pakistani Taliban fighters, clad in black clothes, punish local people for shaving or trimming beards, using mobile phones and even eating naswar," Afghan provincial police chief Ghulamullah Nuristani said over phone.

The vigilantes, according to Nuristani, are affiliated with a Pakistani Taliban faction led by Maulana Fazlullah, the infamous cleric who fled his stronghold in the Swat valley following a military operation in 2009.

Pakistani Taliban spokesman Sirajuddin and the Afghan Taliban denied the police chief¿s claim.

The Taliban's shadow governor for Nuristan, Sheikh Dost Muhammad, dismissed Nuristani's claim as "part of propaganda to undermine the Taliban's growing popularity in the region".

"Only Afghan Taliban operate in the areas under our control," Dost Muhammad said over phone.

However, local journalists said people are routinely body-searched in Taliban-controlled areas.

"Afghan officials believe the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan is involved," said Nimatullah Karyab, an Afghan journalist from Asadabad, the capital of Kunar province.

Before the toppling of their regime by US-led foreign forces in 2001, the Afghan Taliban had set up a department called Amar Bil Maroof Wa Nahi Anil Munkar or the Department for the Preservation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, as part of their Islamisation campaign.

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