Who is Mullah Radio
MIRAMSHAH: Mullah Fazlullah, the new leader of the Pakistan Taliban, has reputation of a ruthless commander.
He led the Taliban’s brutal two-year rule in the northwest valley of Swat, which saw supposed wrongdoers flogged and beheaded in public and hundreds of schools burned down.
Under Fazlullah’s rule, Green Square in Mingora, the main town of Swat, became known as ‘Bloody Square’ for the slaughtered, bullet-ridden bodies that were hung in it almost every day.
Fazlullah, believed to be aged 39, was born Fazal Hayat in Swat. He studied at a madressah and worked as a chairlift operator and sold firewood, before joining his father-in-law’s Tehreek Nifaz-i-Shariat-i-Muhammadi (TNSM).
After US-led forces entered Afghanistan to oust the Afghan Taliban from power in 2001, Fazlullah joined thousands of Pakistanis who crossed the border to fight what they saw as a holy war against the invaders.
He was arrested on his way back to Pakistan but was later released on bail and became the head of the Sharia movement in Swat after his father-in-law was jailed.
In 2006 he began delivering fiery sermons on his own FM station, earning the nickname ‘Mullah Radio’, railing against polio vaccination programmes and girls’ education.
After a deadly army operation to clear the radical Lal Masjid in Islamabad, Fazlullah merged his TNSM with the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).
As his control of Swat, once a popular tourist destination known as the ‘Switzerland of Pakistan’, grew from 2007 onwards, Fazlullah set up Sharia courts that handed out savage punishments.
In 2009 Malala Yousufzai, aged just 11, began a blog on the BBC Urdu website chronicling the horrors of life under the Taliban. The TTP made an unsuccessful attempt to kill her in Swat in October last year, saying she had campaigned against them.
She survived being shot in the head and has gone on to become a global icon of the struggle against extremism.
An army offensive ended Fazlullah’s rule in Swat in 2009 and he escaped with a band of loyalists into the mountains of eastern Afghanistan, from where they have continued to orchestrate attacks in Pakistan.
Fazlullah, who has a Rs5 million government bounty on his head, has mounted some brutal and humiliating attacks on the military, including the beheading of 17 soldiers after an attack in June, 2012.
In September, soon after the political parties had backed a government plan for peace talks with the Taliban, Fazlullah’s men responded with violence.
A bomb attack killed two senior army officers, including a major general, a galling blow for the military.
Fazlullah claimed the attack in a video message in which he spelled out his hard-line position.
“We will remove any hurdle to enforcing Islamic Sharia. Our goal is very clear — we want the law of Allah in Allah’s land,” he said.—AFP