Teenage Suicide Bomber Pardoned
A 14-year-old would-be suicide bomber from Pakistan, caught while on a mission to blow up an Afghan provincial governor, was pardoned yesterday by President Hamid Karzai.
Taliban insurgents and their Al-Qaida allies have launched a wave of suicide attacks against Afghan, NATO and US-led forces in the last two years, seeking to show the government and its Western allies are incapable of providing security.
Most of the victims are Afghan civilians.
The first whiskers of a moustache on his top lip, Rafiqullah stood to one side of the Afghan president, his father, with a full beard, stood to the other, at a ceremony in the capital yesterday.
Rafiqullah’s father, a poor tradesman from South Waziristan in Pakistan, had sent his son to a religious school, or madrassa, to learn the Quran. Later, when he asked where his son was, the teachers there brushed him off, he said.
Then last month, the 14-year-old was caught wearing a suicide vest on a motorbike in the eastern Afghan city of Khost.
Rafiqullah said in an interview over the weekend that while attending a madrassa in Pakistan he and two other boys were separated from the rest of the students and trained to drive a car and made to watch videos of suicide bombers carrying out attacks.
The teenager said he walked across the Pakistan-Afghanistan border into Khost province, where a man named Abdul Aziz gave him a vest full of explosives.
Rafiqullah said he told Aziz he was afraid of carrying out a suicide bombing, and Aziz pointed a gun at him and threatened to kill him if he didn’t.
Rafiqullah’s intended target was the governor of Khost province.
“Today we are facing a hard fact, that is a Muslim child was sent to madrassa to learn Islamic subjects, but the enemies of Afghanistan misled him towards suicide and prepared him to die and kill,” Karzai told reporters, his arm on the boy’s shoulder.
The boy and father bowed their heads as Karzai spoke.
“His family thought their child was learning Islamic studies. That is not his fault, nor his father’s, the enemies of Islam wanted him to destroy his life and those of other Muslims. I pardon him and wish him a good life,” the president said.
“You are now free and forgiven by the people of Afghanistan,” he said turning to the boy and smiling.
Walking to the gates of the presidential palace with his father, Rafiqullah said: “I am very happy that I am pardoned and released.”
Agencies
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