Kabul, Dec 16 : When he was a Taliban member, Mawlawi Pir Mohammed Rohani feared
America and its allies. For years, he was scared even to visit his local
mosque.
Now estranged from the group, out of hiding and living in the
Afghan capital, he fears his former colleagues.
"The big threat is that
if they arrest me, they will behead me from the back of the neck," he said,
laughing.
Rohani is just one of several former Taliban leaders who left
the movement after the US-led invasion only to see it flourish without him.
Still fond of their old associates and sympathetic toward the insurgency, they
find themselves caught in a dangerous limbo.
Despite reconciling with the
Afghan government, they do not fully accept it. Nor do they trust the warlords
within its ranks who previously fought them as part of the Northern
Alliance.
Yet some in the Taliban — particularly the younger, more
radical members —view them as traitors.
Now with security deteriorating
and NATO troops withdrawing, it is getting harder for them to walk this
tightrope.
And so they are scrambling to broker a peace
deal.
Should they fail, a civil war appears destined to begin. Their
decision to break from the resistance may cost them their lives.
Rohani
comes from the southeastern province of Khost. He joined the Taliban even before
the movement took control of the government in 1996. For him and many others it
was the best chance to bring law and order to a country then in the grip of
anarchy.
A religious scholar, he was later appointed director of Kabul
University in what was then known as the Islamic Emirate of
Afghanistan.
When the United States invaded in 2001, Rohani initially
wanted to fight. But after the sheer ferocity of American airpower became
apparent, he changed his mind and fled to Pakistan.
He stayed there until
2005, hardly leaving his house in Miranshah, a town in North Waziristan that is
these days regularly pummeled by American drones. He claims most Taliban at that
time sought a quiet life away from the battlefield, but were pushed into taking
up arms because they were hunted down regardless.
"I could not go and
pray in the mosque next door to my house in case the Americans arrested me, so
all the time I prayed with my wife inside the house. When the Americans forced
us, we tried to organize ourselves to fight against them until the war came to
this point," he said.
Rohani is now a member of the High Peace Council,
which was established with international backing in 2010 to help encourage talks
between the Afghan government and militant groups.
Although the
organization has not achieved any major breakthroughs so far, he believes the
withdrawal of foreign troops will satisfy one of the Taliban’s key demands and
leave them with few reasons to continue their resistance. In the meantime, he
cannot visit Miranshah or Khost.
"The people who are fighting right now
are very emotional, so if they find us they will kill us," he said.
In
May, gunmen in Kabul assassinated Arsalan Rahmani, another High Peace Council
member and former deputy minister of the Taliban. Exactly who carried out the
attack remains unclear, but it left a lingering atmosphere of suspicion and
resentment in some quarters.
Not everyone who broke with the militants is
convinced that Afghan and foreign officials are serious about negotiating an end
to the conflict. Compounded by an obvious concern for their own safety, they are
now speaking with an anger not seen before.
Abdul Hakim Mujahid was the
Taliban regime's representative at the United Nations. Also on the peace
council, he blamed the government for the death of Rahmani, claiming it had
failed to thoroughly investigate the case.
"Any person who is working for
peace is under threat from different sides, not only from one side," he
said.
Mujahid criticized the United States for not freeing the remaining
Taliban prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, and for designating a militant faction
known internationally as the Haqqani Network as a terrorist organization. He
insisted that senior members of the Taliban were in favor of reconciliation and
should not be isolated.
"The other type are inexperienced youths, the
zealous ones," he said. "They are not counting [down] the years when the
American forces will leave and they will capture the government, they are
counting [down] the weeks and months."
Both Mujahid and Rohani were
interviewed before Pakistan released a handful of Taliban detainees last month
in an apparent effort to kick start talks. Since then, however, the Afghan
government is reported to have executed a number of its own Taliban
prisoners.
With all conventional foreign combat troops due to depart by
the end of 2014, people here believe the Taliban's return to power is a genuine
possibility.
Old rivals are re-arming in preparation for the battle
ahead. Young educated Afghans who have grown accustomed to the relative freedom
of life in urban centers during the last decade are now escaping
abroad.
For others, this is a time of mixed emotions. Those who
previously served with the Islamists realize they are under threat, but they
still have the utmost respect for their former organization.
"The Taliban
government was necessary because this is an Islamic nation and we needed
everything it was implementing," said one former Taliban member, summing up the
lingering reverence felt among of his
colleagues.
Ends
SA/EN
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Afghanistan: For ex-Taliban, it's peace or death
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