ISLAMABAD: In a concerning escalation of its recruitment tactics, the United Nations-designated terrorist organization Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) has introduced an online training program targeted at women, charging a fee of 500 Pakistani Rupees (approximately 1.75 US dollars) per participant. This move, which leverages digital platforms to bypass conservative social restrictions in Pakistan, signals a potential shift toward involving women in active jihadist roles, raising alarms about broader radicalization efforts in the region.
This development comes as JeM seeks to rebuild after significant setbacks, including India’s Operation Sindoor airstrike in May, which targeted the group’s headquarters in Bahawalpur and resulted in the deaths of several Azhar family members, such as Sadiya Azhar’s husband, Yusuf Azhar. In response, Masood Azhar has intensified donation drives, including a public appeal last month at the Markaz Usman O Ali in Bahawalpur and an online campaign via EasyPaisa to raise millions of Pakistani Rupees for constructing 313 new centers across Pakistan. Analysts warn that these efforts underscore Pakistan’s inconsistent stance on counter-terrorism, despite its claims of adhering to Financial Action Task Force (FATF) guidelines to curb terror financing.
Experts view the inclusion of women as a tactical evolution for JeM, which has historically avoided deploying females in combat, unlike groups such as ISIS, Hamas, Boko Haram, or the LTTE. Reports suggest this could pave the way for training female suicide bombers or fedayeen attackers, with JeM and allied outfits like Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hizbul Mujahideen relocating bases to Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province to evade further strikes.
On social media platforms like X, users have expressed alarm, describing the course as a “dangerous attempt to radicalize women under the guise of faith” and highlighting its implications for regional security.
As global scrutiny intensifies on Pakistan’s handling of banned terror groups, this online venture not only exposes vulnerabilities in digital oversight but also heightens fears of a new generation of extremists emerging from within households. Global authorities must monitor these activities closely, for enhanced international cooperation to disrupt such insidious recruitment pipelines.