Suicide
Attacks Are Forbidden in Islam: Can Taliban Say It To ISIS-K After the Kabul
Attack?
Main
Points
·
ISIS-K was founded by radical sections of the Afghan Taliban and
Pakistani Taliban
ISIS-K threat is a fulcrum point not just for Afghanistan, but for South
Asian security as a whole
·
ISIS-K and the Taliban are rivals who compete against one another in
their quest to establish an Islamic Emirate
·
Can the Taliban prevent suicide bombings of IS-K and, at the very least,
ensure security from suicide attacks?'
·
How can the Taliban prevent suicide attacks when they have justified and
carried out suicide bombings themselves?
·
Is it possible for the Taliban, within its ‘framework of Sharia’ after
its takeover in Afghanistan to follow traditionally Islamic narratives that
prohibit suicide assaults in all circumstances?
·
Suicide Attacks are forbidden in all situations: Proofs from the Quran
and Ahadith
.....
New
Age Islam Staff Writer
28 August
2021
Photo courtesy: abc7/ Islamic State
of Khorasan
----
ISIS-K, or
the Islamic State of Khorasan Province is reported to have claimed
responsibility for the suicide bombing at Kabul Airport, which killed dozens of
people, including Afghans attempting to flee the country and at least 13 US
soldiers (ISKP), making it the biggest single-day loss of American forces in
Afghanistan since the August 2011 strike on a Chinook helicopter, which killed
30 troops.
According
to a health official and a Taliban spokesman, the number of Afghans killed has
increased to 72, with 28 Taliban members among them. One of Islamic State's suicide bombers
“managed to reach a large gathering of translators and collaborators with the
American army,” according to ISIS-K, which is an adversary of both the Taliban
and the West. The Taliban, who had carried out multiple suicide bombings before
seizing power in Afghanistan, condemned ISIS-K’s suicide blasts near Kabul
airport on Thursday (August 26th, 2021), and said that the region where the
strikes took place was under US control. In return, Biden returned the
attention to the Taliban, saying, “It is in the interest of the Taliban that
ISIS-K does not spread.”
What is
ISIS-K (IS-K) or ‘Islamic State Khorasan’?
In
Afghanistan’s complicated environment of insurgencies, terrorism, and political
and tribal crevasses, ISIS-K (IS-K) is the Islamic State’s offshoot founded in
late 2014. Khorasan is a historical name for the region that encompasses
modern-day Afghanistan as well as parts of the Middle East and Central Asia.
Its reputation for extreme brutality has rapidly increased over the last few
years, perpetrating attacks in and around Kabul, Afghanistan’s capital
city. According to some experts on
Islamist militancy in the region, ISIS-K was founded by a few radical sections
of Afghan Taliban and Pakistani Taliban who fled into Afghanistan after
Pakistani security forces cracked down on them. The suicide attack in Kabul
takes place at a time when the US-Taliban deal is embarking on a long process
of potential peace and reconciliation, as the US plans its final military
withdrawal by August 31, 2001. Set against the peace deal between the Taliban
and the US, the IS-K threat is a fulcrum point not just for Afghanistan, but
for South Asian security as a whole. Indeed insurgency is thriving in a vast
expanse of territory that spans from the Iran-Afghan border all the way to
Kashmir.
Taliban
vs. ISIS-K: What's the Difference?
ISIS-K and
the Taliban are both extremist ‘Sunni’ groups. They are, nonetheless, rivals
who compete against one another in their quest to establish an ‘Islamic
Emirate’. ISIS-K has substantial differences with the Taliban, accusing them of
foregoing Jihad and the battlefield in favour of a negotiated peace deal
hammered out in Doha, Qatar’s “posh hotels.”
Their
disagreements are ideological, according to Stanford University's Centre for
International Security and Cooperation. Ideological differences and resource
competition fuelled the rivalry between the two factions. IS-K said that the
“Taliban derived their legitimacy from a narrow ethnic and nationalistic base
rather than a universal Islamic creed”, according to the centre. According to
the Associated Press, as the Taliban attempted to negotiate with the United
States in recent years, many of those opposed to the talks shifted their
allegiance to IS-K, a more extremist outfit.
In Kabul
and other cities, ISIS-K has perpetrated a series of suicide bombings targeting
both government and foreign military objectives. Experts believe they were
attempting to brand themselves as a more violent and radical militant group.
ISIS-K has been blamed for everything from the deaths of village elders to the
killings of Red Cross employees and suicide assaults on the gatherings of
civilians, notably a series of brutal suicide operations against Shi'ite
targets. A Sufi mosque, electrical pylons, fuel tankers, and Shi'ite bus
passengers in Kabul were among its latest targets. ISIS-K has also attacked a
girls school for the largely Shi'ite Hazara community, according to US sources.
Between the
Taliban and ISIS-K, indeed there are ideological disagreements. But the
questions that arise following the Taliban takeover are: ‘can the Taliban
prevent suicide bombings of IS-K and, at the very least, ensure security for
civilians from suicide attacks?' How can the Taliban prevent suicide attacks
when they have justified and carried out suicide bombings themselves? Can the
Taliban ideologically refute the narratives that justify suicidal terrorism? Is
it possible for the Taliban, within its ‘framework of Sharia’ after its
takeover in Afghanistan to follow traditional Islamic narratives that prohibit
suicide assaults in all circumstances? These are the questions that we must
address at this moment of concern for Afghan civilians and the South Asian
peace.
Prohibition
Of Suicide Bombings In Islam Under All Circumstances
We'll now
reproduce the traditional Islamic narratives, which categorically prohibit
suicide bombing in all circumstances.
Among all
the modern Jihadist groups, the most lethal weapon has always been a suicide
bombing. Fabrication is the method used to create this weapon. They appear to
call it “permissible” (Jaaiz) in Islam. However, they ignore the Quranic
texts and Prophetic sayings in which Islam categorically prohibits suicide in
all circumstances.
Suicide
attacks were never justified in Islam for any cause, not even in exceptional
situations, such as a war tactic. IS-K, on the other hand, uses it
indiscriminately. According to the Holy Qur'an, a suicide attack with the
purpose of murdering others or for any other reason is one of the most
forbidden deeds. Allah the Almighty declares:
“Do not kill yourself” (4:29).
This verse
(4:29) was interpreted by Imam Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, who wrote: “This phrase,
‘do not kill yourself’ proves that it is prohibited to kill someone else or
oneself unjustly.” (Imam Razi, Tafsir-e-Kabir, 57:10)
In verse
4:29, it is forbidden to commit suicide attacks. Allah Almighty issues the
ordinance of punishment for suicide attackers in the next verse (4:30):
“But whoever will do that through transgression
and injustice, We shall soon throw him into the Fire (of Hell) and that is very
easy for Allah”
(4:30).
There is
widespread consensus among Islamic jurists and academics that if Allah Almighty
legislates something in a general sense, the restriction is invalid in any way
until evidence is found. This broad interpretation of the verse refutes all
those who advocate suicide bombing as a combat tactic under specific
circumstances.
Allah
Almighty also declares in another verse:
“And do not cast yourselves into destruction
with your own hands, and adopt righteousness. Verily, Allah loves the
righteous” (2:195)
This verse
(2:195) was revealed in the context of spending in Allah Almighty's cause, according
to Islamic jurists (Fuqaha) and exegetes (Mufassirin). They have, however, used
this verse as proof that it is unlawful to kill oneself or to commit suicide
attacks in any way. They based their position on the general meaning of the
word (Tahluka) mentioned in this verse, as well as other verses such as 4:29
and 4:30, quoting several Ahadith (plural of Hadith) of the prophet Muhammad
peace be upon him, prohibiting suicide attacks.
Since
“Tafseer al-Quran bil Quran” (explaining the Quran by the Quran) is the best
way of understanding and explaining Quranic verses, it should be noted here
that verse 2:195, with its general meaning of the word Tahluka, can be better
interpreted by verse 4:29, which proves that suicide attack is forbidden and
Allah Almighty has decreed a permanent torment for suicide attackers in Hell.
Suicide
Bombing Is Prohibited In All Situations, According To The Following Ahadith:
The Prophet
Muhammad (peace be upon him) is reported to have said,
“Whoever
commits suicide will go to Hell, where he or she will keep falling into it and
abide forever” (Sahih Bukhari)
The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) is
reported to have said,
“Whoever stabs himself to death will continue
to stab himself in Hell. And whoever throws himself off a cliff will continue
to throw himself off a cliff in Hell. And whoever hangs himself will continue
to hang himself in Hell”. (Sahih Bukhari)
The Prophet
Muhammad (peace be upon him) is reported to have said,
“Whoever swears by a religion other than Islam
(i.e. if he swears by saying that he is a non-Muslim in case he is telling a
lie), then he is as he says if his oath is false and whoever commits suicide
with something will be punished with the same thing in the (Hell) fire, and
cursing a believer is like murdering him, and whoever accuses a believer of
disbelief, then it is as if he had killed him.”
(Sahih Bukhari/Sahih Muslim)
The Prophet
Muhammad (peace be upon him) is reported to have said,
“Whoever purposely throws himself from a
mountain and kills himself will be in the (Hell) Fire falling down into it and
abiding therein perpetually forever. And whoever drinks poison and kills
himself with it, he will be carrying his poison in his hand and drinking it in
the (Hell) Fire wherein he will abide eternally forever, and whoever kills
himself with an iron weapon (stabbing himself), will be carrying that weapon in
his hand and stabbing his abdomen with it in the (Hell) Fire wherein he will
abide eternally forever.” (Sahih Bukhari)
The Prophet
Muhammad (peace be upon him) is reported to have said,
“There was amongst those before you a man who
had a wound. He was in [such] anguish that he took a knife and made with it a
cut in his hand, and the blood did not cease to flow till he died. Allah the
Almighty said: My servant has himself forestalled Me; I have forbidden him
Paradise”. (Sahih Bukhari/Sahih Muslim)
In
accordance with the Qur’an and Hadith, a suicide attack is forbidden in a
general application. However, ISIS militants and other terror outfits brainwash
the young people by justifying it somehow on the basis of the so-called ‘Jihad’
and ‘martyrdom’. By Allah Almighty, they are distorting and ignoring the
following Hadith which has exclusively forbidden suicide even during the real
Jihad (i.e. Jihad for defence), let alone the so-called ‘Jihad’ that is being
fought today.
Suicide
attacks are prohibited in general in accordance with the Qur'an and Hadith.
Terrorists affiliated with ISIS and other militants who carry out suicide
bombings are considered criminals by Islam and will be punished in Hell.
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