Rise of Afghan anti-Taliban militias stokes instability fears
JAMSHEDI: Riding on horseback and motorbikes, commander Naeem's fighters combed a fog-enveloped Taliban infiltration route in Afghanistan's northern badlands, as the government expands anti-insurgent militias across a patchwork of fiefdoms.
Desperate to muzzle the resurgent Taliban, the government is cultivating thousands of militias with chequered pasts as a short-term security fix to supplement ground troops suffering record casualties.
But the rise of these groups, a throwback to the devastating civil war in the 1990s that set the stage for a Taliban takeover, risk aggravating factionalism and pushing Afghanistan deeper into what observers call a self-perpetuating conflict.
For Naeem, a militia commander with a short, thickset frame who leads around 200 fighters in the volatile Pashtun Kot district in Faryab province bordering Turkmenistan, they are key for survival.
In a scene that could have been lifted from history books, his horse-mounted warriors with back-slung guns and RPG warheads scoured a mountain pass near the village of Jamshedi for Taliban intruders blamed for a spate of fatal ambushes.
“Without uprising forces,” said Naeem, who is strongly averse to the label militias because of their contentious history, “the Taliban will overrun the district within minutes, killing their way into villages.“
“Without us, Faryab will become another Kunduz,” he said, referring to the northern city that the Taliban briefly captured in September in their most spectacular victory in 14 years.
There are around 5,000 men serving in Faryab's irregular or semi-regular armed groups -- and Afghan politicians are pushing for thousands more across the region as the stubborn insurgency expands, a Western official told AFP.
“The price of an AK47 has roughly doubled in the capital Maimana's bazaar over the last two years as militias have re-mobilised in Faryab,” the official said, requesting anonymity.
President Ashraf Ghani's government also plans to scale up the Afghan Local Police (ALP) - US-backed village defence forces likened to militias - to 45,000 from a nationwide force of around 30,000, he said.
The proliferation of militias, a potential powder keg in the already strife-torn nation, represents a complete departure from previous government efforts to disarm these groups and is at odds with Ghani's recent pledges to rein them in.