Taliban warlords who gunned down schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai produce women’s magazine to recruit female fighters and kids
The savage terror group is copying mags like Woman’s Own to try and indoctrinate females
TALIBAN warlords who tried to murder schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai are producing their own glossy women’s lifestyle magazine to lure them into jihad.
The savage terror group is copying mags like Woman’s Own to try and indoctrinate females to join their holy war.
Sunnat E Khola, referring to a seventh century female Muslim warrior named Khaula, is printed in full colour by the Pakistan Taliban and available online in English.
In October 2012, Taliban thugs tried to assassinate Pakistani schoolgirl and women's education campaigner Malala, now 20 and living in the UK, who went on to become the youngest-ever Nobel Prize winner.
A 39-page edition released this month has messages from religious leaders instead of big celebrity interviews and articles about how women should conduct themselves and dress.
It also contains stories from women who have joined jihad by marrying fighters.
The front cover shows Muslim women in full Islamic dress sitting at a bank of lap tops.
A letters page has a message from the wife of a Taliban prisoner and other articles slam the Pakistani government and the West.
Chillingly, it features an article addressed to Malala, telling her: "I ask you how your education can be the right one when it takes a person away from Allah and away from the purpose of our creation.
"The education you are promoting is producing men and women who are destroying the world."
Another article shows a schoolboy holding an automatic pistol with the chilling headline "Come, let’s do jihad with little Omar Mujahid".
The article says: "My name is Omar Mujahid. I am six years old. I am in class 1.
"My father’s name is Abu Omar and he is a mujahid (holy warrior).
"When I will grow up I will do jihad like my father.
"I will fight kuffar (unbelievers) and those who support them.
"I everyday do physical exercise so that I can become a good, brave mujahid."
The first edition was released in August and told women: "Train yourself in weapon handling, self-defence.
"Make sure you keep a pistol and grenade."
While ruling Afghanistan from 1996 to the end of 2001 when it was toppled by US and UK-backed troops, the Taliban closed down girls’ schools and made it all but impossible for women to work outside the home.
Under Taliban law, women were forced to cover their bodies from head to toe in burqas, and punished for breaking the group's strict codes of behaviour including being seen outside with males who are not relatives.
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