Dukhtaran-e-Millat: Most dangerous women's terrorist organization in Kashmir
On the
morning of Tuesday, August 8, the Indian police arrested a female terrorist
cell in the territory of Kashmir consisting of five women who were in
possession of firearms and homemade bombs.
The police
said in a statement that the women were planning to carry out a terrorist
operation against Hindus in the region, but after arduous searches and
investigations, the police were able to find and arrest them.
Dukhtaran-e-Millat
Beginning in
the 1980s, India witnessed the birth of a women’s terrorist organization
considered the first of its kind in Asia. In 1981, Asiya Andrabibegan inviting her family and
colleagues to wear a face covering, and the call received a great response,
such that her call moved from family to family in Kashmir, which made her
establish a school to teach the Holy Quran in the territory, and the number of
its students reached 400 girls, according to a report published by the
Guardian.
In one of the
gatherings that they set up in the various streets of Kashmir, these women took
down posters of Indian and foreign films, and they also blurred the movie
posters with black paint, claiming that these films incite pornography and
vulgarity. The girls were not satisfied with this only, but also attacked
beauty salons and cafes, claiming them to be dens of the underworld.
These women
repeatedly appeared in the region’s streets, and every time they appeared, they
carried out many terrorist acts, especially since they were famous for carrying
weapons. Since then, India has witnessed the birth of the Dukhtaran-e-Millat
(Daughters of the Nation) organization, led by Andrabi.
The
organization is on the Indian terrorist lists, and its leader has been arrested
more than once. Although Andrabi is in her jail in an Indian prison, the
organization’s work still goes on.
According to
information, Andrabi is 60 years old and obtained a bachelor's degree in
biochemistry, then a master's degree in Arabic from the University of Kashmir.
She married Ashiq Hussain Faktoo, a well-known leader in the Kashmiri
Jamiat-ul-Mujahideen (JM), who is serving a life sentence in India's prisons.
The
organization aims to liberate Kashmir from the grip of India and annex it to
Pakistan.
Female
body, terrorist mind
Dukhtaran-e-Millat
was keen to place itself on the map of terrorist organizations, as it announced
that its ideological framework was defined as a “reformist revolutionary
feminist organization.”
From a
social point of view, it works to control and monopolize religious education
for girls, especially in Quranic schools for young girls, and they also demand
the marriage of girls from the armed organizations in Kashmir and financial
assistance to facilitate marriage for poor girls in the region.
The
organization provides financial assistance to the families of dead militants in
the region, urges girls not to join government jobs, calls on girls to take up
arms and wage jihad against the Indian government, which it describes as the
occupier, and calls for secession from India and joining Pakistan.
Andrabi
stated in her memoirs, which she wrote part of before her arrest in 2018, that
she was influenced at the beginning of her life by three books that served as
her intellectual reference, namely “Conversations on the Hearts of Women” by
Maber al-Qadiri (a fundamentalist Islamist author), “Deep Thoughts of Muslim
Woman”, and Abul Ala al-Maududi’s interpretation of the Holy Qur’an.