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Afghan Women Take Up Arms Against The Taliban


In the Jowzjan Province, there is a history of women taking up arms.
In the Jowzjan Province, there is a history of women taking up arms.

The leader of a fledgling women's militia in northern Afghanistan says dozens of volunteers have joined the fight since a handful of women recently took up arms to rebuff a Taliban attack on their community.

Women in the district of Darz-Aab, in Jowzjan Province, initially fought alongside local forces to prevent the antigovernment militants from overrunning the village of Shahtoot in late October.

Their ranks have since grown to as many as 45 women, locals say, many of whom have sold livestock to buy guns.

Fifty-three-year-old Zarmina, the wife of a local police officer who so far commands the female fighters, said she and the other women had no other choice.

"The number of police personnel was too small, so we had to take up guns alongside our husbands," Zarmina told RFE/RL's Afghan Service. "As the Taliban attacked a police post, I put aside my scarf and fired from different places."

"I had 21 bullets and killed seven Taliban," she claimed.

The force comprises mainly ethnic Uzbeks and Aimaqs, a Persian-speaking minority in Jowzjan, a multiethnic province that borders Turkmenistan to the north.

Darz-Aab Governor Ramatullah Hashar said local officials, tribal elders, and villagers threw a ceremony in a show of support for the women's initiative.

"The area where these women dare to fight against the Taliban is located about 20 kilometers from the district center, and we have encouraged them," Hashar said. "They have been welcomed by villagers and elders of their tribes."

All-Female Militia

Halimah Sadaf, a member of the provincial council, told RFE/RL that some of the all-female militia members in Shahtoot are among the 51 women in the area who fought against Soviet troops in the 1980s.

"Darz-Aab was one of the main areas where the [mujahedin] rose up against the Soviet invasion," Sadaf said, "so the women in this area are able to fight, are able to lead, and they are courageous."

Local officials have urged the government to supply the female fighters with weapons and other equipment.

But more importantly, they said, the local police force needs reinforcement.

"We have 1,600 police in Jowzjan, which is not enough," Mohammad Razaghafori, spokesman of the provincial governor, said. "Conditions have changed now, and [the government] needs to increase the number of local and national police to ensure security in all districts so that women don't have to fight."

Security in the Darz-Aab district has been worsening in recent months, with the Taliban stepping up attacks on Afghan national forces across the country.

The Darz-Aab governor said last month that fighters affiliated with the militant group Islamist State (IS), which controls swaths of Syria and Iraq and claims to be creating a global caliphate, had also increased operations in that district and had captured several villages.

Afghan First Vice President Abdul Rashid Dostum, who is currently leading the military campaign against the Taliban in northern Afghanistan, warned that IS is planning to bring 7,000 fighters to the country's north.

This report was prepared by Alim Rahmanyar, translated by Safiullah Stanikzai, and written by Antoine Blua.

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