Thousands flee feuding Taliban in Afghanistan’s north

Published July 23, 2022
In this picture taken on July 15, 2022, Afghan internally displaced people, who fled to Yakawlang district of Bamyan province due to fighting, gather outdoors near temporary accommodations in Duzdanchisma village. — AFP
In this picture taken on July 15, 2022, Afghan internally displaced people, who fled to Yakawlang district of Bamyan province due to fighting, gather outdoors near temporary accommodations in Duzdanchisma village. — AFP

DUZDANCHISMA: When fighting erupted between Taliban and a breakaway group led by one of their former commanders in northern Afghanistan last month, Zahra and her family fled to the mountains.

For days they walked across the rocky terrain, unsure what lay ahead or when they might return to their home in Sar-i-Pol province’s Balkhab district, where the clashes erupted.

“We didn’t want to get trapped... we all might have been killed,” said Zahra, 35, asking to use a pseudonym for security reasons.

Zahra’s family is among thousands that fled conflict between the Taliban and fighters loyal to Mahdi Mujahid, the group’s former intelligence chief for Bamiyan.

Ethnicity, religious sectarianism, and a battle for a lump of Balkhab’s lucrative coal resources are at the heart of the fighting.

“All these factors are working together in driving the conflict,” Australia-based political analyst Nematullah Bizhan said.

Mujahid, a Shia Hazara, joined the mostly Sunni and Pashtun Taliban in 2019, and was appointed to his post soon after the hardline group seized power in August last year.

Afghanistan’s Hazaras have faced persecution for decades, with the Taliban accused of abuses against the community when they first ruled from 1996 to 2001.

They are also the target of attacks by the militant Islamic State group, which considers them heretics.

Mujahid’s appointment was initially seen as supporting the Taliban’s claim of being more inclusive to non-Pashtuns, but he soon fell foul of the leadership.

The group routinely denies reports of infighting in its ranks, but last month media said Mujahid split with the Taliban leadership when Kabul sought greater control over the coal business.

History of resistance

Balkhab is home to several coal mines and demand has soared in recent months with Pakistan stepping up imports to fuel power plants.

Local Taliban commanders were known to “tax” trucks on their way to Pakistan -- as officials in the previous government did before them -- but when Mujahid resisted Kabul’s efforts to rein in the practice, they sacked him.

“Balkhab has a long history of resisting the government,” analyst Bizhan said, adding the region also fought strongly against the Taliban during their first reign.

While the June fighting lasted only a few days, the United Nations says it displaced at least 27,000 people -- almost all of them Hazara.

The result is a humanitarian crisis that aid agencies are now struggling to deal with.

“We used to sleep thirsty on empty stomachs and wake up in the morning and start walking again,” said Zahra, whose family walked for nearly a fortnight before finding shelter in a village mosque in Bamiyan.

“Everyone was sick.”

The family of Barat Ali Subhani, another resident of Balkhab, has taken refuge in the same mosque.

“We didn’t have anything with us. We just left in clothes we were wearing,” Subhani said.

His seven-member family walked for four days before a shepherd led them to the mosque.

“He saved us,” Subhani said.

“We had nothing. We thought that we will probably die.”

Published in Dawn, July 23rd, 2022

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