Seminaries in Pakistan ‘pumping in more and more bombers’

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MARDAN: A boy who killed 31 army cadets probably had all the characteristics that make the young suicide bombers so dangerous – they are thoroughly brainwashed, poor, disciplined and hard to detect.
“We are alarmed. We plan to beef up our security even more to avert such attacks,” said Zeeshan Khan, a senior police official in Mardan, the town where the cadets were killed on Thursday. Pakistan’s al Qaeda-linked Taliban movement wasted no time in claiming responsibility for the attack on an army recruitment centre.
What makes a Pakistani child trade in his school books for a suicide vest? Experts say it’s a combination of factors but the common denominator is poverty, as many can’t afford to send their children to good schools. So they are enrolled in extremist religious seminaries that first began churning out youngsters eager for jihad in the 1980s to help the Afghan mujahideen fight Soviet occupation.
They are instilled with the discipline of a soldier in the schools, known as madrassas (seminaries), and guided by shrewd clerics who persuade them they are on a glorious path to heaven.
“The 12-year-old boy (suicide bomber) was probably inducted into a madrassa for the last five to 10 years,” said psychiatrist Razwan Taj, who has treated young boys militants tried to recruit.
“That means he (a cleric) has plenty of time to mould him to his way of thinking. The child sees no life outside the madrassa. It is everything. It is the provider of food, of an education, of social security. It’s the world he knows.”
More and more young Pakistanis will study at those seminaries unless the government invests in the country’s crumbling education system and creates more jobs. That is unlikely to happen anytime soon because the government has limited resources.
Once children graduate from the seminaries, they are mentally primed to join militant groups, who give them rigorous training.
“They keep them in isolation, secluded from other people like foot soldiers. Only three to four people are allowed to meet them,” said Abdul Basit, an expert on suicide bombings at the Pak Institute for Peace Studies in Islamabad.
“They are told they are God’s chosen people who have been selected to this holy and sacred job of waging a holy war for the glory of the religion.”
“If someone does not send their child for training, jihad, then they would be reprimanded. They are forced to leave the region or their houses are bombed or one of their relatives is killed,” said Basit. “They can also bomb their homes.”
After years of indoctrination, carrying out the actual suicide attack seems like the easy part.
The Mardan bomber was likely pretending to be student on his way to class at a school located in the military compound. To get a uniform, all he had to do was walk through the bustle of the main market past fish vendors, restaurants and electronics joints and purchase the outfit at a shop.
“A lot of girls and boys tend to want to leave (madrassas) and when their families refuse to take them back or can’t afford to take them back then they react in different ways,” said Taj.