| Residents
of Mingora often wake up to find bodies of those executed by
the militants slung from electric poles in the town’s
central square in the full view of the military, with a note
of warning not to remove them till midday. Some 28 people, most
of them women, have been executed over the past few months and
their bodies thrown in the square which is now known as ‘Zibahkhana
Chowk’, or Slaughter Square.
Bakht
Zeba, a former member of Swat district council, virtually signed
her death warrant when she criticised the Taliban for preventing
girls from attending school. On November.26, masked gunmen dragged
her out of her house in the Mulakabad area of Mingora, brutally
thrashing her before shooting her in the head. Her body lay
there for several hours.
Zeba,
who also ran an NGO, was made an example of, for daring to defy
the militants. She was yet another victim of the Taliban reign
of terror, which has swept the scenic Swat valley. Educated
women like Zeba are being particularly targeted. “For
a woman, even to come out of her house is considered a crime
by the militants,” says Sarfraz Khan, a professor at Peshawar
University, who comes from a village in the restive area.
Executions
and public beheadings of government officials, soldiers, alleged
spies and criminals are frequently used by the militants to
terrorise the population into submission.
The
rising Taliban influence in one of the most progressive and
culturally rich, former princely states, comes as a serious
blow to Pakistan’s battle against militancy. More people
have been killed in Swat by the militants than in Gaza by Israeli
forces. An estimated 1,500 people have, so far, perished in
the fighting raging for the past 18 months.
Pakistani
army troops deployed in the area have failed to stop the rampaging
Taliban, who now control a large swath of 5,337 square kilometres
in the valley, less than 200 miles from Islamabad. The militants
established their own courts to dispense ‘Islamic justice,’
as the government’s control faltered.
Watching
television, singing and dancing, shaving beards and allowing
girls to attend school have all been proscribed as un-Islamic
activities. “Anyone resisting them is punished with death,”
says Zubair Toorwali, an official of an NGO, who fled his home
in the Madian district of Swat, following threats from the militants.
The
names of those who have already been executed by the Taliban
for violating their decrees and those they plan to kill next,
are regularly broadcast on their FM radio, which is used by
the militants as a tool for spreading fear among the population.
Every night, terrified residents listen to the transmission
to find out if any of their kin are on the dreaded list.
Among those slain recently was a local dancer known as Shabana.
Her body was dumped in the square, after she was brutally murdered.
“She deserved death for her immoral character,”
proclaimed the Taliban radio.
People are commonly killed for not complying with a retrogressive
code of conduct prescribed by the Taliban. Amjad Islam, a school
teacher in Mingora, was shot dead for refusing to pull up his
shalwar above his ankle, which the militants believed was against
the Shariah.
All
educational institutions, in the region have been shut down
after the Taliban banned girls’ education declaring it
to be un-Islamic. Parents were warned of dire consequences if
the restriction was flouted.
“Female
education is against Islamic teachings and spreads vulgarity
in society,” declared Shah Dauran, a Taliban spokesman,
in his daily broadcast on radio.
Militants
have blown up more than 185 schools since the start of the army
operation last year. This has affected at least 80,000 female
students and thrown some 8,000 female teachers in unemployment.
“We don’t have any future,” says Mah Gul,
a female school teacher who now lives in Peshawar. The violence
has forced some 300,000 people to leave their homes. “There
is no one left in my village, except for the Taliban,”
says Sarfraz Khan, another local.
Senior
government officials concede that the writ of the state has
completely broken down, as a large number of police officers
and local officials have left their jobs for fear of their lives.
Seventy police officers have been killed – most of them
beheaded – by militants, last year alone. Their decapitated
bodies were exhibited to inculcate fear among others. In some
cases, police and local government officials place advertisements
in local newspapers, renouncing their jobs. “It is the
only way a man can save his family’s and his own life,”
remarks a police officer, who deserted his post recently and
is now residing in Peshawar.
At
least 800 policemen – half the strength of the district
police force – have deserted their posts. So deep is the
fear of the Taliban that all 600 police commandos, specially
trained by the military to serve in Swat, refused to join their
duty this month. Clinics and hospitals have been closed down
because of the refusal of doctors and paramilitary staff to
serve in the affected areas. “The absence of a government
has provided an open field to the militants,” says Khalid
Aziz, a former chief secretary of the province.
Unlike
the remote semi-autonomous tribal region, Swat, with a population
of 1.3 million, is a part of the NWFP which is governed by a
coalition government led by the ANP. But the government seems
to have abdicated its responsibility to the militants. Most
of the local nazims and members of the national and provincial
assemblies have fled the area, leaving the local population
at the mercy of the marauders. A provincial assembly member
of the ANP, last month in an advertisement in a local newspaper,
thanked the Taliban for sparing his life. Afzal Khan, a veteran
politician, is the only one to have stayed in his village, despite
several assassination attempts on his life.
The
federal government also seems to have little understanding of
the unfolding situation and the threat to national security
posed by the rising militancy. There is no coherent policy to
deal with the worsening situation in Swat and other parts of
the NWFP. No federal or provincial government leader has bothered
to visit the troubled area, further fuelling the demoralisation
among the people.
Islamabad
sent thousands of troops at the end of 2007 to quell the insurgency
led by Maulana Fazlullah, a fiery Wahhabi cleric, also known
as Mullah Radio for his sermons on FM radio. The long-haired,
33-year-old cleric started out as a preacher a few years ago,
but gained huge popularity among the local population with his
powerful speeches, broadcast from his illegal radio station.
Subsequently, he raised a militant force to wage a holy war
against the Pakistani state.
Fazlullah
is now a senior leader of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP),
an outlawed militant outfit led by Baitullah Mehsud, the most
wanted militant commander operating from his base in South Waziristan’s
tribal region. Mehsud has also been accused of masterminding
the assassination of Benazir Bhutto.
The
Taliban have extended their influence not only in the tribal
areas, but also some parts of the NWFP. Even though Swat does
not border Afghanistan, Fazlullah pledges his allegiance to
Mullah Omar, the spiritual leader of the Afghan Taliban movement.
The militants have also won the support of the poor farmers
of Swat by redistributing lands seized from the big landlords
among them.
Last
week, Fazlullah, in a radio broadcast, announced a list of 43
people, including federal and provincial ministers and members
of parliament, who he ordered to appear before his Islamic court.
“They will face trial and be punished for working against
Islam,” the cleric told his supporters.
According
to security officials, a large number of Mehsud’s men
from Waziristan, along with Uzbeks and Chechens, have joined
the militant forces in Swat. And some 6,000 to 8,000 highly
trained and well-armed militants are engaged in fighting the
government forces. They maintain that the insurgents are being
funded by some Saudi and Arab charity groups.
A
large number of fighters belonging to banned militant outfits
like Jaish-e-Mohammed, Harkat-ul-Mujahideen and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi
have also joined the new jihad. According to a provincial government
official, most of them are battle-hardened, having fought in
Kashmir and Afghanistan. “This has created a very dangerous
situation,” remarks a security official.
Eighteen
months of military operation has produced little results. The
army achieved some significant successes last year, when they
pushed out the militants from most of the areas, but an ill-fated
peace deal signed by the provincial government allowed the militants
to regroup and return to the area. Local residents blame the
army for looking the other way as the militants continue to
operate with impunity. “The troops remain inside their
camps while the militants freely move around,” says Sher
Mohammed, a senior lawyer from Swat.
The
scepticism regarding the military’s role is widespread.
The rise of the Taliban amid a large army presence has fuelled
suspicion that the soldiers lack the will to fight. Local residents
complain that indiscriminate artillery fire by the troops has
killed more civilians than militants.
A
military spokesman maintains that these allegations are unjustified
as hundreds of soldiers have died fighting militants. Senior
army officers blame the provincial government for the worsening
situation. “How can a military operation work, when there
is no government in the area?” says a senior military
official.
However,
military officials concede that there was a need for putting
in place a new strategy to reach out to the population. As part
of this new strategy, some additional troops are being deployed
in the affected areas. “The troops have been ordered to
take a more proactive approach,” says Major General Athar
Abbas, the chief military spokesman. “It will be a protracted
battle.”
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