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"Why
doesn’t the government drop an atom bomb and kill all
of us. Then it could keep whatever is left of Swat,” declared
an angry Swati man in a desperate phone call from Charbagh village
in the valley. He was among the thousands of villagers who were
preparing to move out of Charbagh and the adjoining Gulbagh
area to escape the shelling by the Pakistan Army’s artillery
guns and the bombing by gunship helicopters.
His
statement echoed the feelings of other civilians who were forced
to abandon their hearths and homes and were heading uncertainly
toward Swat’s principal towns, Mingora and Saidu Sharif.
There was no guarantee they would find refuge somewhere and
were worried about their belongings, including cattle, in their
abandoned homes. Old people, some being carried by young men
on their backs, and frightened children had to walk through
the fields and across the hills as the roads were blocked by
security forces after the imposition of a round-the-clock curfew.
As usual, the government wasn’t prepared to receive this
new wave of Internally Displaced People (IDPs). The battle for
hearts and minds was being lost due to the state’s inability
to cater to the needs of the displaced villagers.
The
military for its part was hard-pressed to avoid civilian casualties
and at the same time uproot the Maulana Fazlullah-led militants
from their well-entrenched positions in the village, located
close to Mingora and Saidu Sharif. The Taliban militants had
started threatening residents of the twin towns and used to
openly patrol the streets after sunset, killing opponents and
dumping their bodies at public places such as Mingora’s
Green Chowk, known as the ‘Khooni Chowk’ or Bloody
Square. There was bound to be ‘collateral damage’
in the densely-populated Swat valley as the troops tried to
push back the militants by shelling and bombing their positions
before moving forward to take control of Sanghota, Manglawar,
Charbagh and other villages sited on the right bank of River
Swat. Troops were thus moved into villages to carry out house-to-house
searches, pick up suspects and set up new military positions.
However, the number of civilian deaths was unusually high and
was causing a political fallout.
The
country’s security forces intensified their operations
against the Swati militants in late January after coming under
criticism from the country’s media, civil society and
political parties. The military high command had to do something
as it was being accused of not doing enough to defeat the militants.
Even political parties such as the ANP and the PPP, that are
part of the ruling coalition, had started expressing reservations
over the military action and demanded more focused and targeted
operations. The army chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani flew
out to Swat to give directions to his field commanders as soon
as the new military action was started and also held meetings
with certain politicians belonging to the ruling ANP to seek
their advice and support. Among the invitees to this meeting
at the Frontier Constabulary camp in Kanju near Mingora, was
the 82-year old Mohammad Afzal Khan, a former minister who has
defied the militants by refusing to abandon his village, Kuza
Drushkhela, in the Taliban stronghold of Matta.
However,
the intensification of the military operation also resulted
in civilian casualties and complaints of human rights abuses.
Villagers in Ningolai alleged that a number of innocent persons,
including teenagers, were apprehended by the troops and shot
point-blank to punish residents of villages where the security
forces and their convoys were attacked. There were also complaints
of people going missing and houses being indiscriminately attacked
and destroyed by the military’s artillery guns and gunship
helicopters. Thousands of people were displaced while many more
couldn’t leave their villages and move to safer places
due to the imposition of a curfew by the government, closure
of roads and absence of vehicles.
Scores
of civilians – the figure being quoted is above 50 –
had been killed in the early days of the new military operation.
Fleeing villagers claimed they had to leave their dead unburied
at homes or had to hurriedly bury them in their courtyards due
to the artillery shelling and bombing by gunship helicopters
in their villages.
Once
again, residents of Mingora, Saidu Sharif and other villages
in Swat generously helped the displaced people by offering them
food and, in some cases, accommodation. Rice was cooked in daigs
and distributed among the fleeing villagers. Most of them preferred
to stay with relatives, acquaintances and friends. Not many
went to the hopelessly inadequate camps, which were set up in
Mingora and Barikot. Many displaced families journeyed to different
parts of Malakand, Mardan, Charsadda, Peshawar and even to places
outside the NWFP.
From
the statements coming from government and military officials,
this was going to be a sustained action aimed at defeating the
militants. More than 20,000 troops were battling the Taliban,
whose strength was estimated at around 5,000. The Taliban leaders,
however, claim that their fighting strength is higher. In an
earlier military operation, the military had pushed back the
militants beyond Matta into the Gat-Peochar and Namal valleys
and the idea was to bottle them up before going for the kill.
But later, the militants were able to regroup and reenter their
previous strongholds in Matta, Khwazakhela, Kabal and Charbagh
tehsils. They also gained influence in the Shamozai area toward
Malakand Agency.
Their three illegal FM radio channels helped them to spread
their message and influence. Some military commanders contend
that the May 21, 2008 peace accord that the ANP-PPP coalition
government in the NWFP signed with the Swati Taliban gave enough
time to the militants to regroup and redeploy. The peace agreement
collapsed in July 2008 and a new military operation was launched.
However, it failed to dislodge the militants and now the military
is in the midst of its third big action in Swat. Its reputation
is at stake this time as another failure would be embarrassing,
to say the least.
The military, however, would need the cooperation of both the
federal and provincial governments to accomplish the mission.
Some political work would have to be done to reassure the people
in Swat and solve some of their major problems. The demand for
enforcement of Shariah in Swat and rest of the Malakand region
is old and has been used by the militants to justify their armed
struggle. After the 1994 armed revolt by the Maulana Sufi Mohammad-led
Tehreek-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM) in Swat and other
parts of Malakand division, the secular government of then prime
minister Benazir Bhutto and then NWFP chief minister Aftab Sherpao
accepted their demand and promulgated the Shariah Ordinance
to set up Qazi courts for delivering speedy justice. Subsequently,
in 1999, an amended Nizam-i-Adl Ordinance was issued in response
to the demand by the Islamic forces in the area.
Now
the provincial government of the secular parties, the ANP and
the PPP, is preparing to amend the Shariah law and issue it
in keeping with the aspirations of the people of Swat and Malakand.
This might deprive the militants of their major rallying factor
and also resolve some of the difficulties facing the people
with regard to their demand for an affordable and speedy judicial
system based on Islamic principles. However, it remains to be
seen if the militants will be satisfied or if they will demand
more. The Swati militants are part of the Baitullah Mehsud-headed
Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and this proscribed organisation,
too, would be influencing events in Swat and its adjoining districts
and tribal agencies.
In
a bid to blunt some of the criticism directed against the Swati
Taliban, Maulana Fazlullah announced a relaxation in the ban
on girls’ education imposed by him in the troubled valley.
Girls were allowed to attend school up to grade four or if they
were aged nine years. He also promised a review of the ban on
girls’ education beyond grade four. The relaxation announced
by Maulana Fazlullah followed the unprecedented criticism of
the Taliban’s decision to ban girls’ education.
The Baitullah Mehsud-led TTP had also asked the Swat Taliban
to review their decision as it wasn’t its policy to outlaw
girls’ education.
The
violence in Swat was only one of the worries of the government
and the armed forces in the NWFP. In a different part of the
province, the Darra Adamkhel chapter of the TTP threatened to
kill Polish engineer Peter Stanczak by February.4 if the government
didn’t accept their demands. The TTP Darra Adamkhel branch
spokesman Muhammad, gave the February 4 deadline for the release
of Taliban militants imprisoned in various jails and in the
custody of the intelligence agencies, calling for a halt to
military operations in the tribal areas, including Darra Adamkhel,
Bajaur, Swat and Waziristan. He also warned the US to stop drone
attacks, saying the missile strikes were being carried out with
the connivance of the Pakistan government.
Polish
Engineer Peter Stanczak was working for the Poland National
Seismic Survey when he was kidnapped by the Taliban near the
Pind Sultani area of Jund in Punjab’s Attock district
during fieldwork on September 28, 2008. His driver Inayatullah,
guard Muhammad Saleem and public relations officer Riaz were
killed by the Taliban on the spot. Earlier, on October 14, 2008,
the Taliban militants had issued a videotape in which the Polish
engineer appealed to the Pakistani and Polish governments to
release him at any cost.
The government is also under pressure to recover other kidnapped
foreigners, including Afghanistan’s ambassador-designate
to Pakistan, Abdul Khaliq Farahi, an Iranian diplomat and a
Chinese engineer. All efforts to recover them until now have
failed. Taliban militants are believed to be holding the kidnapped
men and there were reports that the TTP head Baitullah Mehsud
was demanding the release of his men and some ransom in return
for the kidnapped foreigners. In the past also he forced the
Pakistan government to free some of his important men in return
for the release of kidnapped foreigners and Pakistan Army soldiers.
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