This is a report based on conversations with Pakistani women from Swat
in the IDP camps. The interviews are conducted "By a Group of NWFP
Women" who 'do not want their names to be disclosed'

Kshmendra


"The Women of Swat and ‘Mullah Radio’"
By a group of NWFP women

(“Islam started as soon as we fled from Malakand. People outside Swat
think we had Islam and Shariat. There is no Islam in Swat. The Taliban
have finished it.” - woman from Mingawera, Swat, in a Sawabai camp)

Where does one begin to tell you what they have been saying? It is
difficult to explain because it is difficult for some of us to
believe, to understand, and at times, even to empathise with. Between
their rage and their tears, between giving each other solace and
laughing at lighter moments, they opened up to talk to us. They shall
not be named but they shall be heard by all of us today.

We write here some of the stories the women of Swat told us. They come
from Kabbal, Mingawera (Mingora), Qambar, Kanju and other parts of
Swat. Some are from Buner and Maidan in Lower Dir. Their lives were
affected in many more ways than the lives of their men. Although they
belong to a perceived conservative and retrogressive culture, which
the Pukhtun male has always guarded very carefully, these women have
lived through many months of a terror which has kept them even more
house bound. This style of social control has challenged every aspect
of their Pukhtun way of life in ways that they could not imagine. And
yet their ignorance has played a big part in the tragedy of Swat-- an
ignorance and naivety which made many of them the captive audience of
Fazlullah, or, as they call him, ‘Mullah Radio’.

When we entered the large tent a few women looked up and smiled. Some
got up and put out their hands to greet us. They seemed surprised that
we could converse in the same language.  ‘Sit down. We can’t even
offer you tea’ said one laughing ‘look at us and what we have been
reduced to.’ We quite candidly said that they were OUR guests and
would rather welcome them. Their children were lying on the floor, red
because of the heat, tired and listless in the hot air of the fans.
The women had been sitting in silence before we went in. We could hear
no noise from the tent which was full of about forty women and
children. What could they share with each other? Each story was the
same as the other. It was a pall of misery and silences that hung over
their heads. These women were lucky; they had a common place to come
to, out of their tents. In most camps, the women sit in the heat of
the tents, not being allowed to go out. They wait for their men to
 come before they can use the toilets. Their children defecate outside
the tents as they cannot take them to the toilets. In some schools,
they feed their children first and, at times, do not eat.

One by one they spoke their ordeal, their flight from the bombing, the
endless days of walking with children and the elderly and the dead
they had left behind. Soon each one wanted to tell her story. They sat
closer and closer to us, listening to the others and telling us about
themselves. Most of them had fled from Mingawera and other places in
Swat--walking for days, avoiding the curfew by moving off the roads
and taking to the mountains to walk, walking day and night; hiding
their sons in trucks for fear that the Talibs would take them away to
fight. One woman had walked for nine days with three children under
ten. We cannot recall the number of women who told us about how their
homes were shelled and how they had buried their dead without bathing
them, in hurriedly dug graves. One had lost her baby on the way down,
had dug a ditch beside the road, torn off part of her chadar, wrapped
her child in it and buried her in the ditch. She walked on, to save
 what was left, her own life. Another spoke of how in the madness of
the bombing, she had asked her husband to pick up her baby from the
bed. When they were out of the village, the husband realized he had
picked up the pillow and left the six month old child behind. They
still kept walking.

Another woman spoke of how they were eating peacefully when a mortar
had hit her house. The word ‘mortar’ was a regular part of their
conversation. ‘Matr’ and ‘karpee’ which we finally realised was
‘curfew.’ Another told us how her neighbours’ home was shelled.  Four
men had died on the spot. People had run helter-skelter. The
helicopter passed and the men ran and started digging graves to bury
the dead before fleeing the village. They told the women to collect
what they could and the women started to round up their children. As
the men dug, the helicopter returned to shell. The men left the bodies
and ran for cover. The helicopter fired again and flew past. The men
returned and dug what they could and dumped the bodies into the
graves. She continued to talk, calmly. ‘These were not graves, these
were ditches. We threw them into these ditches and we ran’.

Another woman in a school camp spoke of how her family had left food
in their plates and hot tea in their cups when the shelling began. She
was brave and then her brown eyes filled with tears and she said ‘my
young son, he was in class ten, was hit on the back of his head and he
died. I lost my young son’ and then her tears flowed. The others sat
looking at her, thinking of their own miseries. We sat in silence,
nobody consoling, and nobody talking. ‘At least they should have told
us, why did they not tell us they were going to bomb?’ She wiped her
eyes hurriedly and continued to talk. ‘They are beasts these Taliban.
They are not human. May God finish them all like they have finished
us.’ We were surprised, surprised that her anger turned to the Taliban
when her son was killed by military shelling. She was a strong woman
and continued to talk with a vengeance. ‘May God punish these animals
for what they have done to us. I hope the army
 finishes every last one of them.’

>From one place to another, from one tent and school to another, we
heard them tell us how they were unable to leave their homes for fear
of being beaten or killed or flogged, how their men had been dragged
out of their homes and slaughtered. One of the men said he lived on
the chowk where the Taliban slaughtered people. He told us how they
walked into homes and led out their victims in silence. He told us of
the sounds he heard when these men were slaughtered, like cattle, on
the chowk. He continued to talk “This is the terror they spread, that
a father could not save his son and a brother could not save his
brother, and that they used to stand in silence and watch their sons
being led away. I was so outraged once that I started running out to
stop them. My wife had to drag me back into the house, telling me that
I would only meet the same fate.”

Each woman talked of the slaughter of men, whether they had been
through it or whether they had heard it – it had terrorised them into
silence and acquiescence. They also spoke of how ‘disgraced’ they felt
as they fled with only a dupatta on. One of them laughed and said
“Burqah, burqah, which is all we heard in Swat but when we ran we were
hardly covered and the whole world was looking at us.” The men did not
think this was funny. The humiliation they felt at this had outraged
them--the humiliation at their women being in these camps, being seen
by other men, the humiliation of standing in line for food. Perhaps
that is why there were so many children standing in line for food at
the camps.

But these are stories commonly heard until we heard them tell us
unspeakable horrors. In one of the schools, a group of women led us to
meet their friend. She could not speak because she could not stop
crying. They kept saying ‘Show them; show them what they did to you.’
She was a widow and the Taliban had taken her 12 year old son away to
join them. The women said that they used to come to all their homes
and ask for their sons. They were too scared to resist. Some boys were
taken by force, others went themselves, and others simply disappeared
from madrassahs. The widow had gone and taken her son back from the
madrassah. They had come into her house, taken all her jewelry and cut
of all her hair. She cried for her own humiliation and did not speak a
word. Women from Buner spoke of how the Taliban had no respect for the
Pukhtun way of life, for Islam or for women. How they would enter any
house they wanted, whether to take away their sons or to take
 refuge. They spoke of incidents of the younger women being raped,
after which their breasts were cut off. They told us how their men
were beheaded and hung from electricity poles with their chopped off
heads placed between their legs. They would leave notes on these
bodies for no one to touch.

So why did they let this happen? Why could they not get together to
stop it?  We repeatedly asked them this. Who ARE these people? This is
when the admittance came. They were honest, honest about the power of
Mullah Radio and his constituency of women listeners.

“There was peace in Swat. Shut in their homes many women listened to
‘Raidu Mullah.’ He addressed them directly. “He used to talk about
Islam, about praying five times a day, about going to the madrassah
and learning the Quran. We all thought he was a good man.” He told the
women about their duties under Islam, about cleanliness. Some of them
embarrassingly told us about how he told them to wash their private
parts.

“Radio Mullah ke haramtobe wo” (Mullah Radio spelled trouble for us)
said one woman. “I never allowed my daughters and daughters-in-law to
listen to him and used to switch the radio off. I just did not trust
him.” As his popularity grew, women would line up outside his
madrassah and donate. They donated whatever little jewelry they had.
Even the poorest women would donate her nose-pins. Some of them said
that Fazlullah gave the jewelry to his wife as they saw her wearing a
donated necklace.

This captive, gullible audience, shut in their homes became the main
source of Mullah Radio’s power and support. They encouraged their sons
to join his madrassah. They provided the Taliban with a ready
following. They provided them their sons which they soon realised were
fodder, fodder for suicide bombings and ‘jihad.’ It was only when they
realised and resisted this that the Taliban turned on their own
people. “They would knock at our doors, and would say, ‘give us your
sons in the name of Islam’. Thos who resisted were slaughtered.” They
wanted the little boys and the young men, so little that the guns they
carried were at times longer than their legs--so little that the
innocent brains in their little heads were filled with nonsense about
so-called Islam. But it was all too late and nobody was willing to
listen. “The Taliban did nothing until the foreigners came--the men
from Waziristan and Afghanistan. They were the ones who started
 training the local Taliban”. Many said their families approached the
army and the government for help. But nobody listened. A few said that
anyone who informed the army did not live long. They kept quiet. Even
today parts of their areas where the Taliban have fled to are not
known to the army. They will not speak.

Suddenly in a fit of rage one of them started shouting “What has
happened today when for two years we have been screaming for help and
the military and the Taliban have been sitting with each other
chatting, when their check posts were barely a few feet away from each
other. What was that all about that today it had to come to this that
our army has suddenly decided to bomb its own people? Where were this
army and this government when our people have been relating these
incidents to them for almost two years?” This is only a question to be
answered by those responsible for what is happening to our people
today.

So what was the Nizaam e Adal, what did this mean for the women? They
spoke of the flogging of that poor girl; they said Nizaam e Adal may
have meant no war but that they could not leave their homes for fear
that the Taliban may object to what they were wearing and beat them in
public or kill their husbands. As one of them said “I stopped going to
my relatives’ homes, for funerals and weddings. We were prisoners in
our own homes as we could not move out without our men.” But there was
no trust left in government, police or military. A government which
had signed this deal with the Taliban.

“We have been fooled. We have been fooled by the Taliban, the Army and
the government. We knew two years ago that this was not Islam but
nobody would help us. Why did the army not do something two years when
the Taliban were fewer in number and that when they could be
controlled? When they knew exactly where they were. What is the reason
for their friendship with these animals? Where were this army and this
government when we were screaming for help and going to them?” We
heard this repeatedly and endlessly. “We will only believe the army
when it catches those three leaders. Where are those leaders? Once
they are caught this will all finish. We will believe it once those
three men are caught.”

How unfortunate it all is. How unfortunate that a culture deliberately
keeps its women ignorant, a ready fodder for a madman and that these
people had nowhere to turn to even when they wanted to save themselves
and save our own country. What answer can one give to these poor,
helpless women? Who is going to be held accountable for the violence
they have suffered. It is quite clear that we have never really cared
about them, that we did not bother to educate them because our leaders
were busy squandering our money on foreign trips and properties and
their own men were too busy thinking about their own control over
women. They know today that nobody will ever protect them unless they
see the glint of the dollar on the unfortunate horizon of Pakistan.
Their questions can only be answered by those who know what they have
done. And if they do not answer them in this world, they will for sure
answer them in the next.

(The authors do not want their names to be disclosed.)

http://www.airra.org/analysis/TheWomenofSwatandMullahRadio.html




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