Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

Terrorist barbarians killing our educated people. May Allah destroy these fassadi sobs.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/09/world/asia/09pstan.html?_r=1&ref=world

Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

 **By [JANE PERLEZ](http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/p/jane_perlez/index.html?inline=nyt-per)**

Farook Khan shot and killed by Taliban in Mardan, Pakistan last Saturday in his medical office.

A week ago, two [Taliban](http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/t/taliban/index.html?inline=nyt-org)  hit men, disguised in casual clothes and with stubble on their chins  instead of beards, climbed the stairs to Dr. Khan’s second-floor office  and, as he had lunch between streams of patients, shot him at close  range.        

The assassination of Dr. Khan, cool and quick, was the latest in what appears to be a sustained campaign by the Taliban to wipe out, or at least silence, educated Muslims in Pakistan who speak out against the militants, their use of suicide bombings and their cry of worldwide jihad.
At least six Muslim intellectuals and university professors have been killed or kidnapped in the past year in Pakistan, each death met with momentary notice in the media, promises of inquiries by the government and then a frightened quiet.
The pattern has become almost familiar, so much so that Dr. Khan’s death was called unsurprising by many moderate Muslims, who complain that the government has become powerless in the face of the extremists.
Last year, Maulana Sarfaraz Naeemi, a moderate preacher, was killed when a suicide bomber blew himself up at the school where Mr. Naeemi had spoken out against jihadist ideology. Another popular moderate preacher, Maulana Hassan Jan, was killed in Peshawar in 2007 after he denounced suicide bombings.
Public figures associated with the secular Awami National Party, the main political group in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province, have been kidnapped and killed. Ajmal Khan, a university official and a prominent personality in Peshawar, was kidnapped last month, most likely by the Taliban, and has not been heard from since, the police said.
The extinction of enlightened religious thought is one more element, the moderates say, in a long-term campaign by the Taliban — aided by Al Qaeda — to undermine the state.
“The government doesn’t have the will or capacity to do much. It’s unrealistic to expect them to do anything,” said Rahimullah Yusufzai, a journalist and longtime friend of Dr. Khan. The doctor, like others who have been assassinated by extremists, had received threats, he said. “This is not the first and the last of these kinds of killings,” Mr. Yusufzai said. “People are already scared of discussing the issues. Now they will be more scared.”
There were many strands to Dr. Khan’s energetic life that the Taliban would have found objectionable. In the past year, Dr. Khan, 56, who was trained as a psychiatrist in Vienna, taught what he called a “worldly” Islam to 150 young boys who had been corralled by the Taliban and then freed by the Pakistani Army in the Swat Valley. “He said: ‘This is my passion,’ ” his wife, Dr. Rizwana Farooq, a gynecologist, recalled of her husband’s weekly sessions at a vocational school, called New Dawn. The school was established by the Pakistani military with financing from international aid organizations.
In recent years, Dr. Khan grew intrigued by American democracy. He visited the United States as a guest of the government in 2002, he met Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on her first visit to Pakistan last year, and he was among those chosen to attend a farewell lunch for the departing United States ambassador, Anne W. Patterson, last month. “Dr. Khan has been a longstanding and valuable contact, a strong and central voice in denouncing extremism,” said Elizabeth Rood, the consul general in Peshawar.
But perhaps most challenging to the Taliban was his position as the vice chancellor of a new, liberal university in Swat, whose inauguration was scheduled a few days after Dr. Khan was killed. The Taliban effectively governed Swat, an area of scenic beauty within easy drive of the nation’s capital, for several months in 2009 before being driven out in a major military offensive.
The university had been a sore point with the Taliban for some time, partly because the government originally decided the campus would be built on land where the Taliban ran their biggest mosque and school. That site was later abandoned for a more neutral location on the edge of Mingora, the capital of Swat, and over the last year Dr. Khan had taken charge of hiring the faculty, shaping a curriculum devoted to the social sciences and recruiting a student body, said the rector of the university, Sher Alam Khan.
Of 280 students selected on merit, 50 were women, Mr. Khan said. Three of the 20 faculty members were women, he added.
The father of four children ages 22 to 27, all of whom are professionals, Dr. Khan may have been particularly irritating to the Taliban because his roots were in the rough and tumble of the nation’s right-wing religious parties, not the elite academies and mainstream parties.
He had been a member of Jamaat-e-Islami, the anti-American religious party devoted to turning Pakistan into an Islamic state. Dr. Khan broke with that group and joined another anti-American party, Tehrik-e-Insafi, led by the former cricketer, Imran Khan. From there he staked out more independent positions, and in the last few years participated in international conferences on women, democracy, and improving relations between Muslims and non-Muslims. Soon after his death last Saturday, a faction of the Pakistani Taliban, the Abdullah Azzam Brigade, claimed responsibility for his killing, saying he had misinterpreted jihad and Islam.
While numerous Muslim scholars and professionals have been killed in recent years by the Taliban, the death of Dr. Khan seemed to cut deeper than the others. The News, a daily English-language newspaper that is critical of the government, denounced in an editorial the “dismal record” of the authorities in capturing suspects in such killings. “But merely because the murderers roam free, should they also be allowed to win?” the paper asked.
In the soft fall air in Swat on Thursday, a memorial service was held for Dr. Khan at the campus of the new university. Government officials were not invited, because of security concerns and emotions, said Mr. Khan, the university’s rector. “We are all his imams, we will stand silent in his memory,” he said. “That is a true form of prayer.”

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

Personally i cannot blame anyone without clear proof especially muslims killing muslims, a lot of these killings in my view are made by the american death squads from Xe/blackwater, dynacorp etc.

Its too easy to blame taliban every time i don't buy they are responsible for every assassination while the american death squads are innocent according to media and government!

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

^^ you dont actually think that these barbarians have any faith now do you? do these barbarians even care about muslims? keep on blaming "foreign hand" for your own failures and see where pakistan ends up

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

Even in late 90s, I remember there were a few 'reasonable' Islamic scholars and preachers who were killed by barbarians including a medical school professor. The only common thing in those killings was that the 'targets' represented Islam for what it stands for i.e. peace.

Crazy.

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

Killing of any doctor or learned man who helps people is a crime... never mind what faith the person had.

If it is the Taliban or anyone else one fact i for sure... this was a crime and it was very wrong.

But as Javedmiandad said without proof we should not blame anyone either.

I dont believe a true Muslim could not do this... if it was done by a so called Muslim then that Muslim is more Nihilist than Islamist. Hands down all true Muslims condemn this even the fanatical ones who enjoy fighting... would never stoop so low.

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

They have been killing Shia doctors and other educated men for years. This is nothing new..

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

True but it’s beyond humanity let alone any religion…

I cant seem to understand a reason for this… unless the docotrs were in some way transgressing? Some doctors for example could be spreading immoral practiceses, but thats obviously not the case here… :hmmm:

Besides to kill a doctor on such grounds whilst understandable is still a bit harsh, anyway this is too deep.

Simple fact is most will agree this particular crime is most deplorable.

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

inna lillahi wa inna ilaihi rajioon

is this the guy who used to speak really fast and appeared on tv every now and then? if its the same person i used to enjoy watching him, he appeared on jirga as judge and in another show was drawn into an arguement with zaid hamid once over who supplied ttp

his views were very normal for a pakistani, but they were in direct conflict with the ttp. he was based with some of them for a while, and although he said they wouldnt take help from israel/india, he felt that they should be killed anyway. or atleast thats what i remember

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

Yes. It has been going on for years. But it is hard to find anyone even discussing this matter, let alone trying to catch those who do it.
Shows the situation of minorities in the country.

Remember people like Imran and Nawaz who say that there was no terrorism in Pakistan before 2001. They conveniently and deliberately forget hundreds of minority people, mostly shias, who were killed by these same fasaadis before 2001.

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

^ Sir, please keep on topic. If you don't know, the guy was a member of PTI.

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

I am on topic all right.
But how is his belonging to PTI of significance?

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

^ Was Dr. Khan killed because he was Shiai? If not, you are not on topic.

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

dont know if he was a shia! but if yes then TTP Kharjis should have to do this because of double reason…

an May Allah hve mercy on those poor souls still living in dreams and paradise of fools which claiming a foreign hand involvement on these brutal and barberien acts. As per Jafri said its not NEW but better for dreamers to wake up and face realities.

Since the Anti Ahmadiyya Ordience XX 1984 , 20 Ahmadis doctors killed in sectarian attacks.. come on Miandad try to find out a foreign hand!

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

Has anyone been arrested has any court case been made? all i see is american militia walking around pakistan to do what they like and nobody ask them any questions they can even go into nuclear facility!!! so what are these foreigners doing in pakistan do you have answer i would like to hear it?

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

It is really really painful that sensible people like him have been targeted over the years!

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

no one knows who did it, so stop blaming every thing on taliban, the scapegoat. There is an organized effort going on to create a civil war kind of situation.

PS. i am not a taliban supporter or zaid hamid fan, so shut up

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

The TTP has already claimed responsibility for the attack..

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

LOL shut up....

zakk any source of that claim, otherwise we ordered for shut up!

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010\10\04\story_4-10-2010_pg7_10

http://centralasiaonline.com/cocoon/caii/xhtml/en_GB/features/caii/features/pakistan/2010/10/04/feature-03

Re: Killing of Doctor Part of Taliban War on Educated

What he said