Abdul Rasul Sayyaf

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Ustad Abdul Rabi Rasul Sayyaf
Born 1946 (age 61–62)

Abdul Rasul Sayyaf (left) during anti-Soviet struggle in Jaji, Paktia Province, Afghanistan in August 1984
Nickname Abdul Rasul Sayyaf[1]
Abd-i-Rab Rasoul Sayaf
Abdul Rabb Rasoul Sayyaf
Place of birth Afghanistan
Rank Commander
Other work Sayyaf is as of 2007 an influential lawmaker and has called for an amnesty of former mujahideen.[2]

Ustad Abdul Rabi Rasul Sayyaf[3] (Arabic: عبدالرب رسول سیاف‎, b. 1946, Paghman Valley, Afghanistan) is an Afghan Islamist politician. He took part in the war against the PDPA government in the 1980s, leading the Mujahedin faction [[Islamic Union for the Liberation of Afghanistan],[حزب اتحاد اسلامی]. During the war, he received patronage from Arab sources and mobilized Arab volunteers for the Mujahedin forces. Sayyaf is said to have been the one who first invited Osama bin Laden to Afghanistan. In 2005 the Islamic Union was convertered into the political party Islamic Dawah Organisation of Afghanistan. Abdul is fluent in Arabic and holds a degree in religion from Kabul University and a masters from Al-Azhar University in Cairo, Egypt. He has been described as "a big, beefy man with fair skin and a thick gray beard." Approximately six feet three, 250 pounds. "He usually wears a white skullcap or a large turban, and a traditional Afghan shalwar kameez, a tunic with loose pants." [1]

Contents

[edit] Bio

Abdul Rabi Rasul was a member of the Afghan-based Akhwan-ul-Muslimeen (Muslim Brotherhood), founded in 1969 by Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and Dr. Burhanuddin Rabbani and having strong links to the original and much larger Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. Ustad (Professor) Abdul was a professor at a small Islamic university called The Shariat in Kabul until 1973 when he plotted with Burhanuddin Rabbani, Ahmed Shah Massoud and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar to overthrow President Daoud Khan from the Panjshir Valley. The coup failed and he was forced to flee to Pakistan[3] but was arrested when he returned.[citation needed]

Being imprisoned by the Communist People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) in April, 1978, he was freed in controversial circumstances by the second PDPA leader Hafizullah Amin, who, coincidentally, happened to be Sayyaf's distant relative.[citation needed] Although, by virtue of him being incarcerated, and, consequently not arriving in Peshawar until 1980, until after the actual Soviet intervention, he was recognized by the Pakistanis as the leader of the Islamic Union for the Liberation of Afghanistan (Ittihad-i-Islami Baraye Azadi Afghanistan), a coalition of several parties fighting the Soviet and Afghan government forces. The Islamic Union soon imploded, and Sayyaf retained the name as the title of his own organization.

Sayyaf fought against Soviet occupying forces in Afghanistan during the 1980s, and was generously financed by the kindred conservative Wahhabi in Saudi Arabia. With his Wahhabi brand of Islam he was unable to win many ideological supporters amongst the Afghan population, instead buying support with the extensive funding and armaments he received from his wealthy Saudi benefactors, including Osama bin Laden[citation needed]. During jihad against Soviets he formed a close relationship with Osama bin Laden.[4] Together in the Jalalabad area they established a training camp network, later used by Al-Qaeda personnel, with bunkers and emplacements.[citation needed] In 1981 Sayyaf formed and headed the Ittihad-i-Islami Baraye Azadi Afghanistan , or Islamic Union for the Liberation of Afghanistan. In 1985 he founded a university in an Afghan refugee camp near Peshawar called Dawa'a al-Jihad, (Convert and Struggle), which has been described the "preeminent school for terrorism." Ramzi Ahmed Yousef, who masterminded the first World Trade Center bombing in 1993, attended it.

Although Sayyaf has (or had) many similarities with the Taliban, strict conservative Islamic beliefs, association with and backing from bin Laden and Saudi Arabia -- during the time the Taliban controlled most of Afghanistan he was allied with the non-Pashtun, non-fundamentalist United Front (Northern Alliance) against the Taliban. He is believed by family and colleagues of Ahmed Shah Massoud, to have betrayed and helped kill that military leader of the Northern Alliance, by having knowingly assisted Massoud's two Arab assassins in their mission. [1]

During the post-war period, Sayyaf retained his training camps, using them for militarily training and indoctrinating new recruits to fight in Islamic-backed conflicts such as Chechnya, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and in the Southern Philippines, where his name inspired the Abu Sayyaf terrorist group. Also, in these camps, Sayyaf trained and mentored the soon-to-be-infamous, Kuwaiti-born, future Al-Qaeda operative and senior commander, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, after being introduced by the latter's brother, Zahid, during the Afghan Jihad in 1987.

[edit] Afghan Civil war

After the forced withdrawal of the demoralised Soviet forces in 1989, and the overthrow of the Mohammad Najibullah regime in 1992, Sayyaf's organization's human rights record became noticeably worse, underlined by their involvement in the infamous massacres and rampages in the Hazara Kabul neighbourhood of Afshar. [5] Sayyaf is known to be a vituperative opponent of the like-minded Taliban movement, which is the reason he joined the Northern Alliance, despite his aforementioned religious and ideological affinities with them.

In 1993 during the Afghan civil war in Sayyaf's faction was responsible for, "repeated human butchery", when his faction of Mujahideen turned on the Shi'ite Muslim minority groups.[1] Amnesty International reported that Sayyaf's forces rampaged through Afshar, murdering, raping and burning homes.[6]

[edit] Constitutional Loya Jirga

In 2003 Sayyaf was elected one of 502 representatives at the Constitutional Loya Jirga in Kabul, chairing one of the working groups. Originally wanted Loya Jirga intended to divide the 502 delegates randomly among 10 working groups, but Sayyaf objected, suggesting delegates be divided among the groups to ensure equal distribution of professional expertise, provincial origin, gender and other criteria. "Those who know the constitution, the ulema [Islamic scholars], and the lawyers should be split into different groups so that the results of the discussion and debate will be positive, and closer to each other," said Sayyaf.

Abdul Sayyaf's influence in the convention was felt further when his ally Fazal Hadi Shinwari was appointed by Hamid Karzai as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, in violation of the constitution, as Fazal was over the age limit and trained only in religious, not secular, law. Shinwari packed the Supreme Court with sympathetic mullahs, called for Taliban-style punishments and renewed Taliban's dreaded Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, renamed the Ministry of Haj and Religious Affairs. It deployed squads to prevent public displays of "un-Islamic" behavior among Afghan women.[citation needed]

[edit] 9/11 Commission Report

The 9/11 Commission Report mentions that Sayyaf was a mentor to Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, chief manager of the "planes operation" which culminated in the quadruple hijackings of September 11, 2001.[7] Somewhat ironically, the report also mentions on page 149 that "Sayyaf was close to Ahmed Shah Massoud, leader of the Afghan Northern Alliance. Therefore working with him might [have been] a problem for KSM because bin Laden was building ties to the rival Taliban." Sayyaf allegedly arranged the interview in which Ahmad Shah Massoud was assassinated raising suspicion he was involved in killing Ahmad Shah Massoud.[1]

[edit] Abu Sayyaf group

In Kathy Gannon's "I is for Infidel, From Holy War to Holy Terror: 18 Years in Afghanistan". Mrs. Gannon mentions the Abu Sayyaf group, a Philippine terrorist organization, "was named for him by its founder Abdurajak Janjalani. Janjalani was a student and a disciple of his who received military training from him." Jon Lee Anderson of The New Yorker [1] also mentions that "when the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan in 1989 and many of the foreign jihadis moved on, a group of Ittihad members--some of them native Filipinos and some of them Arabs--formed the Abu Sayyaf terrorist organization in the Philippines".

[edit] Presently

Sayyaf is as of 2007 an influential lawmaker and has called for an amnesty of former mujahideen.[2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f John Lee Anderson. The Lion's Grave, November 26, 2002, Atlantic Books, 224. ISBN 1843541181. 
  2. ^ a b AMIR SHAH (Friday, February 23, 2007; 6:55 AM). Former Mujahedeen Stage Rally in Kabul (HTML). The Associated Press. Retrieved on 2008-04-21. “"Whoever is against mujahedeen is against Islam and they are the enemies of this country," Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, an influential lawmaker and former mujahedeen leader, told the rally.”
  3. ^ a b Ustad Abdul Rasul Sayyaf (HTML). GlobalSecurity.org (Page last modified: 27-04-2005 17:30:56 Zulu). Retrieved on 2008-04-21.
  4. ^ Former bin Laden mentor warns the West (HTML). The Telegraph (12:01am GMT 03/12/2001). Retrieved on 2008-04-21. “THE Islamic scholar who was once a father figure to Osama bin Laden is a quietly spoken old gentleman with the white bushy beard of a Father Christmas.
    At that time I did not see anything particular about him. He was not outstanding in any way, just one person among many ... I found that he was a simple man. I don't know how the media have made such a thing out of him.
  5. ^ Ittihad (HTML). Human Rights Watch (2006). Retrieved on 2008-04-21.
  6. ^ Phil Rees (Sunday, 2 December, 2001, 17:56 GMT). A personal account (HTML). BBC News. Retrieved on 2008-04-21.
  7. ^ page 1469/11 Commission Report (HTML). American government (November 26, 2002). Retrieved on 2008-04-21. “he traveled to Peshawar,where his brother Zahid introduced him to the famous Afghan mujahid Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, head of the Hizbul-Ittihad El-Islami (Islamic Union Party).Sayyaf became KSM’s mentor and pro-vided KSM with military training at Sayyaf ’s Sada camp.”
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