Afghanistan women raise arms to fight Taliban, Islamic State................
In northern Afghanistan, bereaved women join fight against Islamic State
An Afghan woman is reflected in a mirror as she walks in Kabul February 11, 2013.
Gul Bibi, an Afghan grandmother well into her eighties, never expected to become a fighter.But
now she is one of more than a hundred women in Afghanistan's northern
Jawzjan province who have taken up arms against Islamist militants.
Nearly
all of the women have lost a husband, son or brother to the Taliban or
the newly active Islamic State in the province bordering Turkmenistan.
"I
lost nine members of my family. The Taliban and Daesh (Islamic State)
killed my five sons and four nephews," Bibi said by phone from Jawzjan.
"I have taken up arms to defeat the terrorists so other people's sons
won't get killed."
Determined
to protect their families, the women approached a local police
commander, Sher Ali, in December and asked him for guns and ammunition.
"They
came to me and said that if I didn't provide them with weapons they
would kill themselves - before Daesh or the Taliban could," Ali told the
Thomson Reuters Foundation, using the Arabic acronym for Islamic State.
The
women are not a properly structured group, he said; they have no
uniform and have not received any military training other than how to
point a gun at the enemy and shoot.
The
Taliban has carried out attacks in Jawzjan for the last decade, part of
a country-wide insurgency to topple the Afghan government and drive out
foreign troops.
Islamic
State became active in the province - a gateway to Central Asia - in
early 2016, when a Taliban commander and 50 of his fighters declared
allegiance to the ultra-hardline group, said Mohammad Reza Ghafoori,
spokesman for Jawzjan governor.
On
Dec. 25, Islamic State fighters attacked Garmjar village and killed
five civilians, burned down about 60 houses and forced 150 families to
flee, he said by instant messenger.
A
woman in her twenties, who did not want to give her name, said her
husband and many other family members had been killed by the Taliban.
Now she is fighting back, she said.
"I
hit the Taliban with this PK (machine gun), and the Taliban fled. Most
of the their men died. I will stand against Daesh and will hit them
too," she said by phone from Jawzjan.
'FIGHT TO THE DEATH'
The women fighters
are not registered with the army or police and the government has not
licensed their weapons, Abdul Hafiz Khashi, head of the security
department of Jawzjan police, was reported as saying in the Afghan media
last week.
Although
local police have cautiously welcomed the new defence force, he said,
the rag-tag women's unit has raised concerns among higher authorities.
"We
do not support any armed group, unless they come under one of our
forces," Najib Danish, the deputy spokesman for the Afghan Interior
Ministry, said from Kabul.
"We hope they join the Afghan security forces, so we can help them as part of our troops," he said.
But the women accuse the Afghan army of failing to protect their families from the militants.
"First
they killed my brother, then they killed my cousin, my uncle and my
brother-in-law," said Zarmina, another woman fighter. "Now that I have
taken up arms, I am going to fight to the death."
Thousands of civilians have been
killed in Afghanistan in violence since the Taliban government was
brought down in the U.S.-led campaign of 2001.
Afghan
armed forces control no more than two thirds of national territory, and
have struggled to contain the Taliban insurgency since the bulk of NATO
soldiers withdrew at the end of 2014.
The
United States has announced plans to send 300 Marines to the volatile
southern province of Helmand, large parts of which are under Taliban
control, as part of a regular rotation of troops helping train and
advise Afghan forces.
Russia,
China and Pakistan warned month last that the influence of Islamic
State was growing in Afghanistan and that the security situation there
was deteriorating.
Mariam
lost three members of her family in the Islamic State attack on Garmjar
village in December. She fled to Qush Tepa and joined the women
fighters.
"Daesh came,
hit us, abused us, killed our people and burned about a hundred houses.
They didn't leave anything for us. They killed three members of my
family. They wanted to burn us, but we fled and came here," she said by
phone.
"When you have nothing left in your life, you will take up weapons and fight to the death."
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