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It
was a scene from hell. A line of bullet-ridden bodies strung from
electric poles
a severed head with currency notes shoved into
the mouth rolling on the ground
a dead dog thrown on the mutilated
bodies in a crowded bazaar. "This is the fate of criminals
and of those who disobey God," thundered a long-bearded mullah
as he hit one of the bodies with the butt of his rifle.
These
gruesome scenes were recorded on a videotape depicting the public
executions carried out by the local Taliban in Miramshah in North
Waziristan earlier this year. The militants, who fashion themselves
on the legacy of the ousted Taliban regime in Afghanistan, killed
some two dozen alleged criminals and left their bodies hanging for
days in the centre of the town. The corpses were later tied to vehicles
and dragged through the streets in a savage show of medieval barbarism.
"The
action was applauded by tribesmen with shouts of "Allah ho
Akbar," said Rahim Gul who witnessed the incident. Other brutal
events were filmed by the militants to project their "cause"
and the video is now being widely circulated as part of their propaganda
campaign.
Miramshah
is virtually under the control of the local Taliban who have enforced
a harsh system of justice, according to their own interpretation
of Islamic Shariah. Led by Sadiq Noor, a firebrand local cleric,
and Maulvi Abdul Khaliq, the militants, mostly students from the
local madrassah, have tried to emulate the former Taliban rule in
Afghanistan. The tribal areas look like southern Afghanistan during
the 1996-2001 rule of the fundamentalist Taliban regime.
Although
North Waziristan has for a long time been the main base for Al-Qaeda
backed militants and a stronghold of religious extremists, the first
signs of Taliban-like rule started to emerge in December 2005. The
militants gained popularity by pretending to fight crime. They created
an environment of fear when they executed so-called "bandits"
and left the bodies hanging in the open, sending out a message of
terror in the area. "There was a complete reign of terror,"
said Gul, who like scores of residents has taken refuge in Bannu,
some 30 miles from Miramshah. "No one can dare to challenge
them."
Meanwhile, Pakistani military and civil authorities looked
the other way and did nothing to stop the militants from carrying
out public executions and dispensing their brutal brand of punishment
to those who defied them. "Their actions had popular support,"
says Syed Zaheer-ul-Islam, the political agent in North Waziristan,
when questioned on the government's ostrich-act on the local Taliban's
rule of terror. The administration was under clear instructions
not to impede the movements of the local Taliban who remained unchecked
and continued to consolidate their position in the area.
This
strategy, say local observers, was meant to keep the Pakistani Taliban
happy by conceding more and more administrative control to them
- no matter what the cost. The government allowed the "Taliban"
to do pretty much what they wanted. This short-sighted policy of
appeasement encouraged the militants to extend their influence and
reign of terror over a large swathe of the tribal region.
Having ignored the mayhem wreaked by the local Taliban for months,
the troops finally reacted when militants, armed with heavy machine
guns and rocket launchers, seized key government buildings, including
the telephone exchange in Miramshah and attacked paramilitary posts,
killing several government soldiers in the first week of March.
Khaliq's madrassah, known as Gulshan-e-Ilm, was the base from where
the militants launched their attacks on the troops. The incident
triggered the fiercest clashes yet between the militants and the
government forces with the besieged troops retaliating by using
heavy machine guns and artillery.
Backed
by helicopter gunships and jet fighters, the government forces bombed
the militant stronghold, killing hundreds of Taliban fighters. But
the military operation failed to weaken the Taliban's control who,
for the moment, have made a tactical retreat. However, many fear
that the worst is still to come. Both Sadiq Noor and Abdul Khaliq,
the clerics who led the local Taliban, are still at large.
Pakistan's
tribal region, along its border with Afghanistan, has historically
been autonomous and governed by its own laws. However, this system
fell apart after Pakistan sent in thousands of troops in 2003 to
drive out the Al-Qaeda and their local supporters. Since Pakistani
laws are not applicable, the vacuum has been filled by well organised
Islamic militants. The three-year long military campaign has not
only failed to eliminate foreign militants, but has, in fact, strengthened
the local Taliban. Scores of tribal maliks have been killed by the
militants for collaborating with the Pakistani military. While political
parties are banned from operating in the tribal areas, the mullahs
have been given license to expand their influence through any means.
The
Pakistani forces are now confronting not only the foreign fighters,
but also the homegrown Taliban in the strategically located tribal
region that has become a hotbed of terrorism. Pakistani officials,
who in the past tried to draw a line between local Islamic militants
and foreigners, now concede that there is a close nexus between
the two. The emerging local Taliban are well organised and heavily
armed, while many of their leaders are battle-hardened members of
Afghanistan's erstwhile Taliban militia. According to a senior official,
the Taliban have also been joined by criminal elements.
In Wana, the main town of strife-torn South Waziristan, the Taliban
have set up offices which are used for recruitment as well as for
administering justice. They issue orders on loudspeakers at local
mosques and defiance of any kind is not tolerated. On March 26,
the Taliban executed a 25-year-old man for killing a taxi driver
after an Islamic court found him guilty. Hayat Gul, who was said
to be involved in several crimes, was shot dead after the family
of the deceased refused to forgive him.
The
situation has become more worrying as the Taliban influence has
spilled over to the settled areas. In many parts of the province,
the militants have forcibly closed down video and audio shops, as
well as internet cafes, declaring them un-Islamic. In Wana, the
militants blew up the local radio station after it ignored repeated
warnings to stop music programmes.
In Tank, the Taliban have ordered barbers not to shave beards, people
are prohibited to play music, even at weddings, and the traditional
fairs, which provided some form of entertainment to the public,
have been banned. In Dera Ismail Khan, the Taliban are reported
to have forcibly stopped people from organising their spring fair
and instead asked them to hold a religious conference. "We
will use other methods if you don't heed our warning, "declared
the Taliban.
In Swat district, some pro-Taliban clerics set television sets on
fire. In Peshawar, clerics have threatened to take action against
those cable operators who show western television channels and FM
radio transmitters set up in mosques are used to propagate their
own radical version of Islam. The zealots, in many cases, appear
to have the backing of a section of the MMA government, while in
some areas the militants have reduced the local police to a powerless
and virtually ineffective entity.
The emergence of the local Taliban movement is ominous as Pakistan
battles to drive out Al-Qaeda fighters. It also indicates the government's
failure to establish the writ of the state in the sensitive border
region. While launching its military campaign, the government has
done little to address the social and economic problems plaguing
the lawless territory. There has been no effort to improve law and
order and provide security to the people. It is apparent that the
situation in Waziristan has spun out of control and there is a clear
and present danger of disastrous long-term political consequences.
It will become increasingly difficult to contain Islamic militancy
in other parts of the country if the rising Taliban movement in
the tribal areas and the NWFP is not curbed. Even more dangerous
is the Afghan war spilling over to Pakistan. If the tribal areas
fall into Taliban control, this will have a direct effect on the
Afghan war and boost the Afghan Taliban insurgency.
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