Singleton
05-14-2009, 11:13 AM
Ulema vow to fight Taliban if army fails
Thursday, 14 May, 2009 | 03:00 AM PST ISLAMABAD, May 13: Prominent religious leaders, for years mute in the face of growing hardline religious influence, are mobilising support for the government as it battles the Taliban, warning that militants could take over the country.
“The military must eliminate the Taliban once and for all,” Mufti Sarfraz Naeemi, a senior scholar of the Barelvi school of thought, told Reuters.
“Otherwise they will capture the entire country which would be a big catastrophe.”
Mufti Naeemi said that ulema had wanted to avoid confrontation with the Taliban so had not spoken out against ‘aggression’. But they could not stand by and let the Taliban impose their rule.
“They want people to fight one another; that’s why we have kept silent and endured their oppression,” he said.
“We don’t want civil war ... But God forbid, if the government fails to stop them, then we will confront them ourselves.”
For the first time in the country, protesters have been taking to the streets to denounce the Taliban. They have been holding anti-Taliban rallies across the country and are organising a gathering of 5,000 ulema in Islamabad on Sunday to drum up support for the military in Swat.
“We support the army operation in Swat because it is a battle for the survival and defence of Pakistan,” Sahibzada Fazal Karim, leader of Jamiat Ulema-i-Pakistan, a moderate party, and an organiser of the weekend conference, told Reuters.
“What these militants were doing was un-Islamic. Beheading innocent people and kidnapping are in no way condoned in Islam.”—Reuters
This about says it all when it comes to the moderate, true Islamic believers and leaders who have had it with radical terrorists who are still trying to kidnap the good name of Islam, which means peace, not terrorism.
Thursday, 14 May, 2009 | 03:00 AM PST ISLAMABAD, May 13: Prominent religious leaders, for years mute in the face of growing hardline religious influence, are mobilising support for the government as it battles the Taliban, warning that militants could take over the country.
“The military must eliminate the Taliban once and for all,” Mufti Sarfraz Naeemi, a senior scholar of the Barelvi school of thought, told Reuters.
“Otherwise they will capture the entire country which would be a big catastrophe.”
Mufti Naeemi said that ulema had wanted to avoid confrontation with the Taliban so had not spoken out against ‘aggression’. But they could not stand by and let the Taliban impose their rule.
“They want people to fight one another; that’s why we have kept silent and endured their oppression,” he said.
“We don’t want civil war ... But God forbid, if the government fails to stop them, then we will confront them ourselves.”
For the first time in the country, protesters have been taking to the streets to denounce the Taliban. They have been holding anti-Taliban rallies across the country and are organising a gathering of 5,000 ulema in Islamabad on Sunday to drum up support for the military in Swat.
“We support the army operation in Swat because it is a battle for the survival and defence of Pakistan,” Sahibzada Fazal Karim, leader of Jamiat Ulema-i-Pakistan, a moderate party, and an organiser of the weekend conference, told Reuters.
“What these militants were doing was un-Islamic. Beheading innocent people and kidnapping are in no way condoned in Islam.”—Reuters
This about says it all when it comes to the moderate, true Islamic believers and leaders who have had it with radical terrorists who are still trying to kidnap the good name of Islam, which means peace, not terrorism.