When we think about Taliban, the first image that comes to mind is that of the Islamic extremists who are on the pages of newspapers and news previews. Nevertheless, the term Taliban has an entirely different meaning. Indeed, the Taliban (from the Arabic ṭāleb, singular of ṭālebān) is nothing more than a student of Koranic schools in the Iranian area.
The Taliban culture and tradition are characterised by being based on a mixture of Shari’a and Pashtunwali, the code of honour of the Pashtun people. The latter is inspired by the Deobandi Sunni current (a religious current from the Indian subcontinent and Afghanistan), based on the principles of solidarity, austerity and patriarchal management of every aspect of family life. Another important influence is the Wahhabi, the Jihadist and the Pan-Islamist. Like the Wahhabis and Deobandi, the Taliban are so strongly opposed to Shia Islam that they do not recognise the Afghan Shia Hazara as Muslims. Unlike Wahhabi thinking, the Taliban do not deny popular practices, do not destroy the tombs of the pirs (masters or guides in Sufism) and believe that dreams are future revelations.
But how did the image of the Taliban that we know today come about? What was its role in the area and what is it today?
The beginning of a new nation and civil war
What can be defined, for narrative convenience, as a movement, it was born as a reaction to the Soviet Union’s occupation of Afghan soil. The resistance, in fact, started from the Koranic schools and in 1992, it imposed itself as an armed force capable of responding to the needs of a totally devastated State – economically, socially and politically. The Taliban were able to come to terms with the warlords and to exclude from the conflict all the other armed groups that were gradually being created, unifying them all under the aegis of the Koran. For these reasons, the Taliban initially enjoyed excellent support from ethnic Afghans, Pashtuns and Pakistanis.
According to Ahmed Rashid, a Pakistani historian, the Pakistani government supported the Taliban because they let the Pakistani Mafia of truck drivers traffic undisturbed on their roads. This is borne out by the reconstruction of the motorway lines between Pakistan and the neighbouring former Soviet republics, which began immediately after the end of the war with the Soviets and was carried out entirely by Pakistani emissaries.
The United States also initially supported the Taliban regime, for military and diplomatic reasons. On the one hand, the Taliban had been able to defeat the Soviets and had driven them far back into the territories they had conquered. On the other hand, this movement, although judged excessively radical by many Western actors, seemed to be the only one capable of unifying and stabilising Afghanistan on the world geopolitical scene.
For their part, at that time, the Taliban’s exclusive priority was the security of the Afghan people. One of the most representative events which explains the role that the Taliban had at that time by the population of the region – which, having never been proved or denied, and makes it the contours of a legend – is what happened in the spring of 1994, in the village of Sang Hesar, near Kandahar.
It is said that some warlords had kidnapped and raped two girls from the village. Mullah Muhammad ‘Omar, a veteran of the mujaheddin faction defined as Ḥarakat-i Inqilāb Islāmī (Islamic Revolution Movement), gathered about thirty Taliban men and went to retrieve the girls, steal weapons from the warlords involved and finally hanged the commander from a cistern as a warning to anyone who might think of doing it again.
Later, Mullah ‘Omar, interviewed on the subject, declared:
We were fighting against Muslims who had taken the wrong path. How could we be comfortable with so many crimes committed against women and poor people?
The new Afghan state
Between 1995 and 1996, after having conquered almost the entire Afghan territory, the Taliban emerged victorious from the civil war. Thanks to the consensus gained following the victory first against the Soviet occupiers and then against the various factions into which the resistance was divided and which had been competing for the government of the territory since the Russians had abandoned the region, the Taliban imposed a theocratic regime based on the strict application of Koranic laws. In the winter of 1995, they laid siege to the capital Kabul, blocking all entry routes and bombing it. In March 1996, Head of State Burhanuddin Rabbani and Prime Minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar attempted to respond to the provocations, but had to admit surrender on 26 September 1996, abandoning Kabul and fleeing north.
The next day, to assert their power, the Taliban killed the last president of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, Mohammad Najibullah, who had been living in the UN building with his brother for protection since 1992.
To glorify the new state as much as possible, Afghan power had to be asserted in any form. For instance, the two Pehlawan brother generals, on 20 May 1997, rebelled against the Uzbek warlord, Rashid Dostum, and asked the Taliban for help. With this help they managed to drive Dostum back to Uzbekistan.
In 2001, they lost power after NATO intervened following reports of links between the Taliban and al-Qā‛ida and other Islamic terrorist groups. However, the Taliban continued their fight against the international coalition troops in Afghanistan and also against the government troops that were also stationed in the northern regions of Pakistan.
From 2014 to the present
In 2014, presidential elections were held, and the Taliban tried to influence the outcome, as some candidates had promised to negotiate with them and refused to sign agreements with the United States. This context gave rise to two factions within the Taliban: one that worked on anti-election campaigning; the other, more extremist, opposed to the ‘soft’ line represented by political dialogue, which continued to perpetrate terrorist attacks.
In December 2014, the ISAF (International Security Assistance Force) mission – a NATO mission, authorised by the UN, which aimed to support the Afghan government in the fight against Taliban and al-Qaeda terrorists – came to an end. For this reason, in January 2015, the Resolute Support mission was launched, with the same objectives as the previous one, increasing the ‘remote warfare’ components by adopting Force Protection systems. In 2015, the Taliban gained ground again, especially in the Khorasan region (between Afghanistan and Pakistan), thanks to the advance of the IS terrorist group. In this region, the IS-affiliated Wilayat Khorasan movement led to the recognition of the Taliban authorities by the central government. Meanwhile terrorist attacks continued – with the emblematic attack in Kabul in 2016, claimed by both the Taliban and IS.
One of the most controversial policies of Taliban is the exclusion of women from all jobs and prohibiting them from any form of mixed education). One of the most popular activists who has been fighting for years against the segregation of women is Malala Yousafzai. In 2012 she was shot in the head, but she survived and continued her battle, winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014 together with Kailash Satyarthi of India.
A UNESCO report stated that:
“The Taliban’s edict on girls’ education has led to a 65% drop in their enrolment. In schools run by the Directorate of Education, only 1% of students are girls. The percentage of female teachers has also slipped from 59.2 per cent in 1990 to 13.5 per cent in 1999”.
The 2018 elections were held in the same manner as in 2014. The Quetta Shura – considered to be one of the most powerful decision-making councils in the entire Islamic world – decided to highlight how weak the government in Kabul is by intimating terrorist attacks on polling stations, streets and cities, so as to keep the number of voters as low as possible.
Basically, the Taliban are doing nothing more than reflecting in part the great distrust of the people towards the political class. Until now, the latter has let foreign states heavily influence the daily management of Afghanistan, showing that it is not at all clear what the real needs of the population are.
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