Saturday, February 28, 2009

Thursday, Feb 26, 2009 Mingora, Swat Pictures

Swat, Pakistan

Pakistani women sit on rubble of a school blown up by alleged Islamic militants in Mingora, capital of troubled Swat valley in Pakistan on Thursday, Feb. 26, 2009. Taliban militants in Pakistan's Swat valley have extended a cease-fire, strengthening a peace process that Western governments say risks granting a safe haven to extremists close to the Afghan border. (AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

 

 

 

Swat, Pakistan

Swat, Pakistan

Pakistani labourers work on the rubble of a market blown up by a suicide attacker a couple of weeks ago, in Mingora, capital of the troubled Swat valley in Pakistan Saturday, Feb. 28, 2009. Taliban militants have extended a cease-fire, strengthening a peace process that Western governments say risks granting a safe haven to extremists close to the Afghan border. (AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

Private school in Mingora, Swat Pictures

Swat, Pakistan

Pakistani girls study in their class at a private school in Mingora, capital of the troubled Swat valley in Pakistan Saturday, Feb. 28, 2009. A hardline cleric dispatched by Pakistan to negotiating a peace deal with the Taliban said the right of above fourth grade girls to attend school was still under discussion. Taliban militants have extended a cease-fire, strengthening a peace process that Western governments say risks granting a safe haven to extremists close to the Afghan border. (AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

 

 

Swat, Pakistan

Pakistani student Tariq Khan walks past a painting depicting the valley painted in a classroom of a school allegedly blown up by Islamic militants in Mingora, capital of troubled Swat valley in Pakistan, Thursday, Feb. 26, 2009.(AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

 

Swat, Pakistan

Pakistani students sit in a class at a private school in Mingora, capital of the troubled Swat valley in Pakistan Saturday, Feb. 28, 2009. Authorities decided to reopen government schools after a negotiation with Taliban but schools for senior girls still under discussion. (AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

 

 

Swat, Pakistan

Pakistani girls study in their class at a private school in Mingora, capital of the troubled Swat valley in Pakistan Saturday, Feb. 28, 2009. A hardline cleric dispatched by Pakistan to negotiating a peace deal with the Taliban said the right of above fourth grade girls to attend school was still under discussion.Taliban militants have extended a cease-fire, strengthening a peace process that Western governments say risks granting a safe haven to extremists close to the Afghan border.(AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

Supporters of pro-Taliban cleric Sufi Muhammad Pictures

Swat, Pakistan

Swat, Pakistan

Swat, Pakistan

Supporters of pro-Taliban cleric Sufi Muhammad are seen outside the mosque where negotiations between their leader and government officials are taking place, in Mingora, capital of the troubled Swat valley in Pakistan Saturday, Feb. 28, 2009. Taliban militants have extended a cease-fire, strengthening a peace process that Western governments say risks granting a safe haven to extremists close to the Afghan border.(AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

 

 

Swat, Pakistan

Amir Izzat, left, spokesman for pro-Taliban cleric Sufi Muhammad briefs the media about the negotiations between their leader and government officials, in Mingora, capital of the troubled Swat valley in Pakistan Saturday, Feb. 28, 2009. Taliban militants have extended a cease-fire, strengthening a peace process that Western governments say risks granting a safe haven to extremists close to the Afghan border.(AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

 

Swat, Pakistan

A supporter of pro-Taliban cleric Sufi Muhammad waits outside the mosque where negotiations between the leader and government officials are taking place, in Mingora, capital of the troubled Swat valley in Pakistan Saturday, Feb. 28, 2009. Taliban militants have extended a cease-fire, strengthening a peace process that Western governments say risks granting a safe haven to extremists close to the Afghan border.(AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

Swat residents coming back home.

Swat, Pakistan

Pakistani villagers, who fled their houses due to fierce fighting between militants and security forces, go back to their homes after a cease-fire in Mingora, capital of the troubled Swat valley in Pakistan on Friday, Feb. 27, 2009. Taliban militants in Pakistan's Swat valley have extended a cease-fire, strengthening a peace process that Western governments say risks granting a safe haven to extremists close to the Afghan border.(AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

Feb 27, 2009 Mingora Swat Army troops pictures

Swat, Pakistan Swat, Pakistan Swat, Pakistan

Pakistan Army troops pass through the main market of Mingora, capital of troubled Swat valley in Pakistan on Friday, Feb. 27, 2009. Taliban militants in the valley have extended a cease-fire, strengthening a peace process that Western governments say risks granting a safe haven to extremists close to the Afghan border. (AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

 Swat, Pakistan

A soldier of Pakistan Army patrols in the main market of Mingora, capital of troubled Swat valley in Pakistan on Friday, Feb. 27, 2009. Taliban militants in the valley have extended a cease-fire, strengthening a peace process that Western governments say risks granting a safe haven to extremists close to the Afghan border. (AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

 

Swat, Pakistan

A soldier of Pakistan army stands guard in a main market of Mingora, capital of the troubled Swat valley in Pakistan on Friday, Feb. 27, 2009. Taliban militants in Pakistan's Swat valley have extended a cease-fire, strengthening a peace process that Western governments say risks granting a safe haven to extremists close to the Afghan border.(AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

Friday, February 27, 2009

Pakistan paid Taliban $6 million for the cease fire

In this report it says that Pakistan paid taliban 6 million dollars to ensure peace in the SWAT valley. it also states that the talibans have demanded that the army checkposts to be rmoved from the area and that there shud not be any paki army left in the region.

Source:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-AhWdDgwxE

Doubts raised over Swat sharia deal - 21 Feb 09

Fighters with the Pakistani Taliban have agreed to a ceasefire in the Swat valley, under the condition that Islamic law be implemented in the region.

Al Jazeera's Imran Khan reports from Islamabad, where many fear that the agreement could come at too high a price.

Source:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qchgw8ijiao

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Swat peace pact our internal matter: FO

Updated at: 1950 PST, Thursday, February 26, 2009  


ISLAMABAD: Foreign Office (FO), yet another time, made it clear to the international world that Swat peace pact, signed by Pakistan government with Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) leaders was our internal matter therefore all the concerns and reservations being voiced by foreign nations were baseless.

Amid weekly briefing in Islamabad on Thursday, Foreign Office spokesman Abdul Basit said foreign nations should not be concerned over Swat peace accord as it is helping government end terrorism in Swat.

He hoped India to respond quickly over the information Pakistan has sought in connection with Mumbai attacks in order to bring the actual culprits to justice and to reestablish the process of Indo-Pakistan bilateral talks.

FO spokesman said government is doing whatever it could for safe recovery of abducted envoys in Pakistan.

Meanwhile, Basit told State Minister Malik Ammad will represent Pakistan at SAARC Foreign Ministers’ Conference in place of Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi in Sri lanka.

Source: TheNews

Check posts removed in Swat: sources

Updated at: 2000 PST, Thursday, February 26, 2009 


SWAT: Security forces on Thursday abolished FC’s check posts across Swat, sources said.

Check posts were abolished on plea of Shura, sources maintained adding, “Security forces have also stopped checking vehicles.”

 

Source:http://thenews.jang.com.pk/updates.asp?id=69794

Sharia in Swat -- problem or solution?


Thursday, February 26, 2009
Ikram Sehgal

Months of intense pressure by the Pakistan Army on Maulana Fazlullah resulted in considerable collateral damage to his organization but also dislocation of thousands of local population and loss of precious lives of both civilians and Pakistani soldiers. A peace agreement devised by Sufi Mohammad, leader of the Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat Mohammadi (TNSM), has the backing of the NWFP government as well as tacit sanction of the federal government.

There is bound to be mixed opinion about any agreement with terrorists of the Fazlullah-kind, the misperceptions force-multiplied by the confusion prevailing. The government did a terrible job of preparing the people of Pakistan for the proposed deal, more importantly the world was left mostly aghast. With the PPP trying to project a secular image in the world, the Presidency has been sensitive to growing western criticism by talking about the implementing of the Sharia at some future point "when complete peace has been restored in Swat". NATO expressed its reservations and after some hesitation (and in line with US Special Envoy for Pakistan and Afghanistan Richard Holbrooke) US Defence Secretary Robert Gates joined the chorus of critical voices. Unsurprisingly India, in firm self-denial about the roots and causes of terrorism of the non-Muslim kind within its own territory, is predicting dire consequences for the world. Engaged heavily in stoking the Swat cauldron, one can understand their motivated interest in protecting their "investment" in Fazlullah.

Hit hardest by the ongoing fighting, the people of Swat have welcomed the ceasefire. Observers and analysts who know the area, its history and its people closely have also welcomed the prospects of lasting peace. Experience of the ongoing "war against terrorism" in Afghanistan and in FATA should have brought home the truth that though their motivation may look alike from the distance and even though the ideology they profess may have common features and certainly linkages operationally, Al Qaeda and Taliban are quite different as organizations. Al Qaeda may be destroyed and defeated militarily but the Taliban cannot be defeated militarily or eliminated physically because it has become a mindset, an ideology prevalent in large parts of the tribal population of Pakistan. Many complex reasons prevent this situation being eliminated in a short time. Moreover Fazlullah needed to be isolated from the mainstream, Maulana Sufi Mohammad does that effectively.

Fazlullah has instructed his following not to display arms in public, it would have reinforced his rhetoric about being "the victor". This public perception is contrary to facts; the Pakistan Army has understandable reservations because ceasefires in the past have been used to regroup and re-fit. Previous peace agreements also collapsed because viz (1) the government backed out from some of its commitments and (2) far from having a unified command separate entities among the Taliban have been acting independently against any peace arrangement. Trust, which is a precondition for smooth working, is badly lacking. There is apprehension that implementation of the Sharia would undermine the judicial system of Pakistan; that is not true. Provisions in our Constitution include the 'Objectives Resolution' providing for the implementation of Islamic laws in this country. The far bigger problem is to define what exactly is the Sharia; determining that will be a complex task for the Qazis and their courts.

The demand for implementation of the Sharia in Swat is nothing new; this longstanding demand has some justification. Swat is a former so-called 'Princely State', a territory being ruled indirectly in British times through a local ruler, the Wali of Swat on behalf of the British, but under indigenous laws. The status of Swat was kept intact at the time of independence, never being formally incorporated into Pakistan administratively, politically or legally. Formal merger with Pakistan took place as late as 1969. The legal system under which the Wali was providing justice was a combination of Islamic injunctions and tribal customs or interpretations of those injunctions. Qazi courts provided quick and cheap justice with the Wali himself being the final legal authority.

This legal system was maintained during the initial years after the merger till the 1973 Constitution made Swat a part of the Provincially Administrated Tribal Areas (PATA) directly under the control of the President of Pakistan as represented by the Governor of NWFP. The traditional legal set-up was still not touched. Things became difficult only after 1975 when the Governor introduced a regulation giving legal powers to the Deputy Commissioner (DC) of Swat District. The two parallel legal systems created procedural confusion and delays in the dispensation of justice. As rightly stated by Amber Darr in his article, giving the DC legal powers in addition to his executive functions was a violation of the principle of separation between executive and judiciary. This situation created inconvenience and frustration, and led to dissatisfaction among the people in Swat. A legal judgment by the Superior Courts against this unsatisfactory situation in PATA came too late.

In 1994 the TSNM under the leadership of Sufi Mohammad succeeded in their fight for the implementation of the Sharia or – as we have seen- for the return to the status quo of 1969, the Nizam-e-Adl was proclaimed. The demand had been granted by the PPP-government in 1994 after fruitless efforts for nearly 25 years to suppress the movement. Though successive governments tried to implement the agreement of 1994 the situation was less than satisfactory. The events of 9/11 and the invasion of Afghanistan by the US in November 2001 created a wave of anger among the Pakistani Pashtuns. Sufi Mohammad, whose movement till then had not been militant, led a group of several thousand followers to Afghanistan to join the fight in support of his fellow Pashtuns. The campaign ended in a disaster with most of the Swatis killed or captured. Rashid Dostum buried many of them alive in Shebergan after the Pakistanis were handed over by Maulana Dadullah to Dostum in exchange for allowing the Afghan elements in his Taliban force surrounded in Konduz to go free. On his return Sufi Mohammad was tried and put into jail. Fearful of the parents of the youth lost in Afghanistan, he elected to remain in jail for his own safety. Militancy then surfaced next in Swat under the leadership of Sufi Mohammad's son-in-law Fazlullah or 'Maulana Radio'; by 2006 or early 2007 it had become quite virulent. The war in Afghanistan led towards a radicalization of the Sufi's movement and Fazlullah capitalized on Sufi Mohammad's absence.

Those who talk about the "barbarians being 100 miles from the gates of Islamabad" must understand that the peace deal towards the implementation of the Sharia is simply the concession of a demand already conceded earlier. The local Swati population, mostly Yusufzai Pashtuns, need peace and harmony in their lives. We must give the Sufi Mohammad initiative a good try, keeping the military option always open and not letting Fazlullah call the shots. While many hurdles remain, that the people of Swat want to give the deal a chance should be enough reason to go for it.

P.S: I acknowledge, with gratitude, the research and analysis thereof of Dr Bettina Robotka of the Institute of Business Administration (IBA), Karachi.

The writer is a defence and political analyst. Email: isehgal@pathfinder9.com

 

Source:http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=164578

Arming villagers to fight militants


Thursday, February 26, 2009


The plan to arm 30,000 civilians in NWFP is not the way to curb increasing terrorism and crime. It will only bring a 'cowboy' culture of western America of the 16th centaury. People will resort to targeting their rivals on the pretext of killing terrorists and criminals. Serious problems might also be created for the police and the judiciary in catching and punishing the killers.

Moreover, citizens of other provinces will also demand that they should be armed too to protect themselves against car and cell phone snatchers as the government has failed to provide any protection for them.

Sqn-Ldr (r) S Ausaf Husain

Karachi

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

The War In Pakistan

Reporting from Pakistan, Steve Kroft examines the state of Pakistan, where Islamic insurgents are attempting to take over the country. Kroft also speaks with Pakistan's new president, Asif Ali Zardari.

Source:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PNAcVvahIAQ

Inside Story - Sharia in Pakistan';s Swat-18 Feb 2009-Part 2

Some are celebrating, while others are worried as Sharia law is introduced in North West Pakistan. Announced on Monday, this was part of the agreement between the government and Pakistani Taliban.
Will it help to restore peace or just trigger chaos in the already volatile region?

Source:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZwS3Xhn9oc

Inside Story - Sharia in Pakistan's Swat-18 Feb 2009-Part 1

Some are celebrating, while others are worried as Sharia law is introduced in North West Pakistan. Announced on Monday, this was part of the agreement between the government and Pakistani Taliban.
Will it help to restore peace or just trigger chaos in the already volatile region?

Source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pykn1Cv7OrQ

The imperative of peace in Swat


By Mazhar Qayyum Khan

Feb 26, 2009

The peace agreement between the government and the Tehrik-i-Nifaz-i-Shariat-i-Muhammadi has brought an enthusiastic response from the people of Swat. There were jubilations and peace marches in different parts of the valley. Indeed, the whole country has heaved a sigh of relief. The rising death toll of innocent Swatis, known for their exemplary gentleness and humility, their mass exodus from the valley to safer areas, the widespread disruption of life and rank misery were a source of great anguish for all Pakistanis and should be so to all those who have a sense of humanity. The return to normal life, already partly in evidence, like the resumption of female education that suffered most at the hands of militants should be unequivocally greeted with satisfaction…continue reading..

Click to read the whole article.

Swat – story and reality

Wednesday, February 25, 2009
This is with reference to the above-titled letter by Lakhkar Khan that appeared in your newspaper on Feb 14. The writer has written about two very sad deaths in Swat -- one of a child killed while peering out of a window and the other of her mother killed in the firing of security men. The writer has questioned the 'bravery' of military men in text books.

I assure the writer that the bravery of a soldier in front of his enemy is always overriding and text books are not really wrong. In most cases, the soldier dies first and gets the award of bravery later. News stories in daily papers can sometimes be wrong but not the ones which find their place in text books. The security forces do not fire unless ordered by the civil authorities and that only in those situations where the peace has been consistently shredded by undesirable elements.

A Q Anjum

Rawalpindi

******

This is in reference to Shakir Lakhani's letter in the series "Swat peace deal: right or wrong" (Feb 23). He claims that the UK did not give up any of its territory while negotiating with the Provisional IRA (P-IRA). That is not in fact true.

The Belfast agreement, signed by the British and the Irish in April 1998, inter alia, devolved powers from the British parliament to Ireland under the latter's own constitutional setup. It further included an early release of all P-IRA paramilitary prisoners in Britain's custody and closure of redundant British army bases in Northern Ireland. Furthermore, under the agreement, paramilitary units of the IRA were given over two years to decommission their weapons. Since that agreement, while North Ireland is still part of the larger United Kingdom, it is no longer under Great Britain's control. In return for these concessions, the Irish agreed to bring police reforms and strengthen their administrative and political institutions.

In my initial letter supporting negotiations with the Taliban, I never said that militants in Swat should be given a freehand to run the area's affairs. I only advocated negotiations as the only logical way forward. Enforcement of a Sharia-based judicial system is not tantamount to giving up all rights by the government in the region. Negotiations should obviously include details of an effective post-war political and administrative system, concrete guarantees against vigilante justice by militants and an eventual decommissioning of weapons along with an exchange of prisoners.

Syed Umair Javed

Islamabad

******

Signing the peace accord with the Taliban in Swat can only mean one of the two things: either the militants are innocent and it was wrong to start a war with them; or the army isn't strong enough to fight them so it gave in.

So if the militants are indeed innocent, the people who where responsible for starting a war against them should be held accountable. And if they're not innocent then signing a peace accord in Swat means that we're ready to turn Pakistan into another Afghanistan.

Yasir Amanat

Islamabad

******

The more I learn of the opposition to the Swat accord by the Americans and the westernised Pakistani elite, the more I am convinced of its usefulness to Pakistan in general and NWFP in particular.

Asif Ali Shah

Abbottabad

******

The people of Swat feel that mullahs and the military are two sides of the same coin. As for the agreement itself the happiness shown by the people of Swat shows that they are against the brutal ways of the Taliban.

Some ignorant politicians like Imran Khan and Qazi Hussain Ahmad should be banned in Malakand division because they have supported the Taliban. They never came to see the people of Swat or shared their pain. They make judgments about life in Swat while sitting in their drawing rooms. They are active on the judges' issue and they stand up for Palestine but I would like to ask them why they never stood up for the people of Swat. Imran Khan has said that Talibanisation is a 'Pashtun reaction'. If that is indeed the case then why are Pashtun houses, schools, markets, bridges and so on being destroyed, and why are Pashtuns being killed? Imran Khan says that the Taliban are fighting America but from what we have seen in Swat, the only victims suffering at the hands of the Taliban are Pashtuns -- where are the Americans? Also, if the JI, the PTI and the JUI-F favour implementation of Sharia in Swat why don't they also demand implementation of Sharia in Lahore or Islamabad?

It's almost as if people like Imran Khan, Hameed Gul and Qazi Hussain are like the political wing of the ISI -- and the Taliban are like the terror wing. People like Fazlullah, Muslim Khan and Shah Dowran are nothing without the support of their backers. They are strong only because their backers want to make them strong. Shah Dawran used to own a general store in Qambar while Fazlullah used to be a chair-lift operator.

We are awake now because we know who our enemy is -- and it is our responsibility to educate every Pashtun man and woman so that they also know who their enemy is.

Seena Khan

Swat

Sharia for FATA too!

Wednesday, February 25, 2009


The peace deal in Swat is a commendable development. It shows that the ANP government managed to do what the previous MMA government could not. Unfortunately, some so-called secular and liberal elements in the country are playing a negative role by criticising and defaming the provincial government decision on false premises. These elements are trying their best to obliterate the ideological foundations of Pakistan. They ignore the fact that what the ANP has done is in fact a democratic step.

Now it is time for the federal government to replace the infamous FCR in FATA with Sharia laws.

Ihsanullah Tipu Mehsud

South Waziristan agency

Sudden change of heart

Wednesday, February 25, 2009


First there was peace announced in Swat – then Bajaur and now we read of Mullah Omar writing a letter to other Taliban in Pakistan asking them to stop attacking the military. And Mangal Bagh is attacked as well – did he fail to carry out the orders given to him? How is this all happening? It seems all very sudden, this change of heart by the Taliban.

Can anyone tell me who is in control?

Muhammad Junaid

Research scholar

University of Essex

UK

Arming villagers in NWFP

Wednesday, February 25, 2009


The decision by the NWFP government to distribute arms among villagers for self-defence against the Taliban is not a good idea at all and will hardly achieve the purpose for which the arms are to be distributed. It is the responsibility of the government to provide protection to citizens and not to encourage the creation of private militias.

Ghani Khan

Islamabad

Source:http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=164394

Scot-free in Swat?


Wednesday, February 25, 2009


Sufi Muhammad Khan has announced a ten-point peace plan for Swat, under which militants would not display arms, troops would withdraw from some key positions and schools would re-open. We have been told repeatedly that the truce and the agreement on the imposition of Sharia law mark big steps forward. But the whole issue leaves open questions that demand answers. There is nothing in the peace plan about punishment for those who committed all kinds of atrocities for months in Swat. Nor is there any mention of amnesty.

The extent of the depravity of these people is almost unparalleled. Dead bodies were dug out from graves and hung in public; women accused of being prostitutes were made to dance in streets before being killed; anyone who challenged the militants, including the elderly, was ridiculed, beaten and in some cases driven out of the valley.

Is there to be no accountability in Swat? Will those who carried out these atrocities walk away scot-free? Will the rapists of women walk gaily past their families in the streets of Mingora? Will the murderers of young men scoff at the parents of victims? The message such a situation would send out could have grave repercussions. These must be considered by the authorities. Do they really wish to give confidence to criminals that they have impunity for all kinds of horrible offences?

We have been told these people demanded Sharia. Many accounts are emerging to suggest nothing could be further from the truth. After all, just over a year ago, in the election of 2008, the people of Swat had voted out religious parties in favour of the ANP. They would hardly have done so had they wished for Sharia rule. Like their counterparts everywhere in the country, the people of Swat seek order in their lives and a just, efficient judicial system. This continues to be denied to them. Those who should be punished for the most grotesque acts of inhumanity have instead reaped rewards under the peace deal. They have made it clear they intend to stay in command in Swat, dictating terms under which girls can attend school. The omens are not good. The purpose of punishment, under the law, is of course to deter further crime. This deterrence has not been put in place in Swat and in the future we can expect the adverse consequences of this to be felt across a valley stained with unwashed blood.

 

Source:http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=164399

Malakand agreement: necessary but insufficient


Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Nasim Zehra

Multiple outcome of the implementation of the Malakand Peace Agreement between Sufi Muhammad and the government is unfolding before us. It ranges from beginnings of peace in violence-wrecked Swat to ongoing negotiations between the principle interlocutors, the ANP government, the army and the TNSM Chief Sufi Muhammad; from the emergence of common position between the government's principal interlocutor Sufi Muhammad and the government's principle antagonist Maulvi Fazlullah of Swat Tehreek-i-Talibaan Pakistan (TTP) to points of debate or even disagreements between them. The immediate gains and the immediate problems that are obvious at this early stage of the Malakand peace accord are indeed indicative of the opportunities and the many risks this accord presents.

Reported kidnappings in the post-accord period have included the newly-posted District Coordination Officer (DCO), Khushhal Khan, his six guards and three National Bank of Pakistan employees including a cashier. The DCO was released after six hours. A TTP Swat spokesman had reportedly told Reuters: 'He is our guest. We have to discuss some issues with him. We will serve him with tea and then free him." The National Bank employees, who were kidnapped from Odigram area near Mingora, have not yet been released.

The list of initial 'positives' visible in Swat is also undeniable. Return of the Internally Displaced People(IDPs) from the Swat region has begun; all boys schools have opened while girls schools till only grade 4 have opened; instead of armed militias ordinary people roam the public spaces in Mingora and its immediate vicinity. Life is though only limping back to some normalcy. Mingora and its neighbouring areas present a contrast to even a fortnight back. Then people lived under virtual terror and state institutions, law–enforcement agencies and the army were virtually non-existent if not paralyzed.

The government's plan, worked out jointly by the army and the ANP is an attempt to initiate a process whereby the public space ceded to the TTP-Swat and other militant and criminal groups is retrieved by the government. This would involve removing the TTP's check-posts, ensuring that the law-enforcement agencies become functional, putting an end to kidnappings and killings of local citizens, enabling the men and women of Swat to lead a normal life and ending the militants' control of public spaces. Given the extent to which the government and the state lost control of Swat and conversely the extent to which TTP acquired control of Swat , the task of retrieving control will be a complex one.

Clearly the elements in the government-army strategy to reassert government's writ include dialogue backed by incentives, quick dispensation of compensation, show of force and development. Within the immediate context dialogue, quick compensation and show of force are being used. Development initiatives, including reconstruction of schools, hospitals, police stations, peoples' homes etc are being planned for implementation as soon as the security situation improves.

The two-step dialogue includes dialogue with the direct interlocutor and indirect dialogue with Maulvi Fazllulah of TTP-Swat. The beginnings of partial peace in Swat signal the early success of the dialogue approach. The ceasefire announcements by TTP-Swat, its decisions to remove TTP check posts, its decision to not hinder movement of army personnel and other government officials are also a positive yield of the direct and indirect dialogue approach. However conversely indirect dialogue is also surfacing the expected: TTP- Swat is putting forward their demands which also violate the Constitution and the law of Pakistan. They have declared girls only up to grade four can attend schools. Release of TTP-Swat members in government custody is also being demanded. Question of the army's future presence in Swat is also being discussed. These issues notwithstanding, there is continuing dialogue and not a deadlock.

Then there is the Adl regulation, 2009. It is a vehicle through which the NWFP government-army believes that their principle antagonists the TTP-Swat can be delegitimized in the eyes of the public. If their stated cause is bringing justice to the people then the proposed Adl regulation, 2009 is intended to assure and then demonstrate to the people of Malakand that by bringing the appeal process to the Malakand Division, the people of Malakand will get justice without travelling to Peshawar and to Islamabad. Additionally by inducting additional judges and court officers for the existing Shariah courts in Malakand, the government will also ensure 'speedy and accessible justice.' These appointments will go through the usual judiciary route. The revival of the District Magistracy system to expedite the legal process is also being contemplated. This is then the crux of what the government has agreed to in the Adl regulation. There are no new laws that, at this stage are being proposed. TNSM's representative in the February 15 jirga meeting in Peshawar assured the government that of the six responsibilities of the government, which include culture, education, finance, foreign policy, security and law, TNSM's agenda was only focused on law. "They are also only focused on Malakand, not the rest of the country" was the refrain of an ANP negotiator.

The centre-piece of this strategy to retrieve control of Swat is the TNSM leader Sufi Muhammad. The initial impact of this centre-piece is repeatedly broadcast through all television channels. The image is of Sufi Mohammad being followed by hundreds of people conveys that he commands respect amongst the people of Swat. His decision to camp in Swat till peace returns has won him the status of a saviour. Within a context in which the people of Swat have experienced being virtually abandoned by those who were to safeguard them and Swat's public spaces, such a reaction towards Sufi Mohammad is not surprising.

The strategy is largely on track. It is being followed according to the script on which the army and ANP had been working, for at least five months. In the comings days barring the disruption of the peace effort by a third party, peace efforts will probably proceed smoothly. There will be a greater presence of the provincial cabinet members including the Chief Minister in Swat, the compensation package to the Swat inhabitants who suffered during the militant-army operations will be distributed and there will be some movement on the release of TTP prisoners.

These gains notwithstanding especially against the backdrop of an earlier dreadful Swat situation, there are three objectives the government will seek to achieve to actually demonstrate that the Malakand peace agreement has actually 'delivered.' One to not allow the TTP-Swat to implement its own interpretation of Shariah, within and beyond the public space in Swat. Two, the government should debilitate organizationally and resource-wise, through establishment of check-posts, terror and public trials etc of organized and armed militias in Swat and beyond. Three, to prevent the TTP from functioning as a deadly and armed militia which pursues the objective of forcing its own version of Shariah through terror.

The only viable effort to re-establish the writ of the state requires that the government does not compromise on these three objectives. The Malakand agreement is proving to be a first positive step, but clearly an insufficient one.

The writer is an Islamabad-based security analyst. Email: nasimzehra@ hotmail.com

Source: http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=164402

Taking on the Taliban

Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Zafar Hilaly

The first battle of a war is psychologically an important one. Pakistan has lost not only the first battle, that for the control of Waziristan, but also the second, for Swat. Agreements cobbled together following both battles have attempted to mask what is a patent fact: the defeat of the army at the hands of the Taliban and the passing of these areas and their inhabitants into the Taliban fold. Further setbacks are likely unless the instruments of war are forged again and a leadership emerges that has the wisdom and will to confront the challenge.

But all is not lost. As they move further east, the Taliban will meet greater resistance from the populace, especially in the cities, where they are loathed. The Wahhabi brand of Islam that the Taliban espouse has never managed to gain traction beyond the deserts of Saudi Arabia, not even among the Arab Diaspora. Had Zia-ul-Haq not embraced it Pakistan too would have been spared. In the 30-or-so million Shias of Pakistan the Taliban face a determined enemy, as they do in Punjab and Sindh and beyond where Sufi Islam predominates. Hence, the danger that the murderous and fanatical cadres of the Taliban pose is less to the creed of the masses and more to the political and economic stability of the country and the institutions of the state.

Had the Taliban been willing to participate in the political life of the country by holding public meetings and jalsas, instead of having recourse to Qurbani Chowks to convey their bloody message or to project their agenda through the media, some sort of compromise might have been possible. (Although that too is doubtful, considering that even the moderates of their ilk, like Sufi Mohammed, believe that democracy is a pernicious Western import and balloting to choose leaders un-Islamic.) Instead, the Taliban are emphatic, as their actions over the course of six years proved in Afghanistan that only their concepts of governance, law, religion, justice and politics will prevail. Happily, their determination to inflict their credo on the country is no fiercer than that of the majority of Pakistanis to resist as the Swatis proved by their brave resistance before they were sold out by the ANP, whose leader remains in hiding in Islamabad. Fortunately, the Taliban by their actions have left few people in any doubt that Pakistan will not be rid of the presence of foreign forces, be able to attract foreign investment, become a hub for regional trade, avoid isolation, ridicule and contempt, and develop, unless they are repulsed. And, likewise, their terrorist ghettos recaptured and cleansed.

The Taliban wage war much as they guard their peace through acts of terror, rape, executions and murder like some other insurgencies such as the ongoing one in Somalia and that of the erstwhile Mau Mau in Kenya. They seek to engender hate and fear amongst the populace so that the government appears helpless, unable to afford protection to the citizenry and hence undeserving of loyalty or support. Specifically targeted are those essential to the functioning of an organised political society such as the police, teachers, health workers, district officials. Having driven away or killed them they create an alternative administration to which the hapless population turn for their needs. The insurgency meanwhile continues until a weak government capitulates or sues for peace which is what happened in Swat and FATA.

How then can the Taliban be defeated?

There is no prescription for certain success. Genocide or the relocation of the entire population, a tactic used by Stalin against the Chechens eight decades ago is unthinkable, for obvious reasons. The "nation building" advocated by counterinsurgency experts is a panacea presently in vogue, but given Pakistan's dismal record of nation building in peaceful areas, to say nothing of war zones, it is a tall order. "Killing every insurgent" is also not the answer because it is normally accompanied by the excessive use of force resulting in collateral damage which generates resentment, gives rise to cries for revenge and acts as a recruiting spur for fresh Taliban inductees. What the Americans term as "legitimation"--i.e., the creation of an authority comprising persons acceptable to both sides--is a more promising idea. As the Taliban refuse to recognise any authority but their own as legitimate and regard Pakistanis as foreigners, it is a non-starter. What therefore remains is to confront the Taliban politically and militarily, and to do so with gusto, imagination and skill, in other words, to fight fiercely when necessary and negotiate purposefully when so required in the hope that eventually reason and reality will win out.

Pakistan is doing neither at present. The fighting effort thus far has at best been half-hearted; and capitulation aptly depicts the current negotiation strategy. Sentiments such as "we cannot fight our own people" are excuses and explanations rather than reasons for the lack of determination in prosecuting the war. And irresolution is responsible for the haste to sue for peace. Surrender of the Swat type will no doubt bring peace. History shows that defeat and surrender do indeed usher in peace but that of the victor not the vanquished, which Pakistan cannot afford. We would do well to remember that when the Taliban conquered Afghanistan in 1996 we too celebrated the peace that ensued. But, as Afghans will confirm, the peace that the Taliban brought was that of the grave. And it is to the grave that our dreams of a progressive, tolerant Pakistan now seem consigned with each Taliban success. The government still has the time to prove its mettle; but if it fails to do so it is more than likely that the populace will take matters into their own hands to ward off the Taliban scourge. There are signs that this dreadful prospect is already happening in at least one of our major cities. The resulting civil war could be catastrophic for Pakistan's well being.

The writer is a former ambassador. Email: charles123it@hotmail.com

Source:http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=164403

Swat deal local solution to local problem: Qureshi

Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Afghan FM conveys country’s serious concern


WASHINGTON: Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi on Tuesday described the Swat peace arrangement as a “local solution to a local problem,” emphasising that it would in no way affect Islamabad’s resolve to get rid of violent extremism afflicting the region.

“The logic behind this agreement is a local solution to a local problem, which is quick dispensation of justice. It is not any appeasement of militants,” he told journalists after meeting his Afghan counterpart Rangeen Dafdar Spanta.

“Pakistan’s determination and resolve to defeat terrorism is as sound as it was. We are absolutely clear in our objectives,” he added, when asked about the agreement between the NWFP government and the people of Swat.

Pakistan’s Ambassador to the United States Husain Haqqani, Pakistan’s Ambassador to Afghanistan Muhammad Sadiq and Director General ISI Lt-Gen Ahmad Shuja Pasha accompanied the foreign minister during his meeting with the Afghan delegation.

The Pakistani and Afghan foreign ministers are in Washington to attend bilateral as well as trilateral meetings with senior US officials as part of an ongoing review of the US policy towards Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Putting the development in its historical context, Qureshi said Swat was a princely state that worked under a peculiar judicial system, they were comfortable with it, aimed at quick and inexpensive justice.

“This is a continuation of the demand — through this agreement we have addressed procedural difficulties, it is not a compromise, there is no question of any capitulation. We will continue to do what have to do in our own interest,” he said.

Qureshi said he had assured his Afghan counterpart “that there was nothing to be apprehensive” about this arrangement. “It is a local arrangement for a local purpose, nothing beyond, nothing that will undermine our commitment to fighting extremism and terrorism and nothing that will undermine the closeness that Pakistan has developed with Afghanistan.”

Afghan Foreign Minister Spanta underlined that the Afghan government had confidence in the leadership of Pakistan. He said he “conveyed Afghanistan’s serious concern” in this regard to the Pakistani foreign minister “who informed me of the situation.”

“We look forward, hope to strengthen cooperation between the two countries to address the challenges, to address the menace of terrorism as common enemy for stability, peace and prosperity of Afghanistan and Pakistan.”

Qureshi said he looked forward to developing “greater understanding, a communication of our point of view, sharing of information and developing a convergence of interests,” at review meetings with senior US officials during the visit. The top Pakistani and Afghan diplomats have been invited to attend meetings with Secretary Hillary Clinton and other senior American officials as part of the Barack Obama Administration’s review of the US policy toward Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Source: http://thenews.jang.com.pk/top_story_detail.asp?Id=20553

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Mingora, Swat Pictures / Feb 24 2009

 

Pakistani traffic police officers control the traffic at a busiest road in Mingora, the main town of Swat Valley, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2009. Taliban militants extended a cease-fire Tuesday in northwestern Pakistan's Swat valley, granting more time for peace talks with the government that the U.S. worries could create a haven for insurgents in the nuclear-armed country.

AP Photo by AP

 

Pakistan

Pakistani army troops patrol on a road in Mingora, the main town of the Swat Valley, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2009. Taliban militants extended a cease-fire Tuesday in northwestern Pakistan's Swat valley, granting more time for peace talks with the government that the U.S. worries could create a haven for insurgents in the nuclear-armed country.

AP Photo by AP

 

Pakistan

Pakistani laborers unload the relief goods from a truck, arranged by local government to distribute among the displaced people in Mingora, the main town of the Swat Valley, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2009. Taliban militants extended a cease-fire Tuesday in northwestern Pakistan's Swat valley, granting more time for peace talks with the government that the U.S. worries could create a haven for insurgents in the nuclear-armed country.

 AP Photo by AP

Arming villagers against the Taliban


Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Our government has clearly not learnt from its mistakes. It is now starting off another disastrous programme by arming villagers to resist the Taliban. In the past they encouraged Mangal Bagh to do dirty work for them till he became too powerful to control and turned his guns upon the administration. They create Frankenstein's monsters and later complain about their own creations. Providing security to its people is the job of the government not of vigilante groups.

We don't want gun-toting vigilantes to be roaming our streets. Most of the weapons are going to end up with the favourites of the political bigwigs no matter what sort of a scrutiny procedure they plan to enforce. Please do not turn our province into a killing field, have a pity on us and instead recruit more people into the police and the FC.

Dr Arshad Khan

Peshawar

***********

Will the people of villages in NWFP fight for their own safety now? Is this not the responsibility of the state? Why is the government making a deliberate effort to transform Peshawar into a kind of a tribal area and invite civil war?

Muhammad Junaid

University of Essex,

UK

Peace in Swat?

Tuesday, February 24, 2009


The recent debate on the enforcement of Nizam-e-Adl in Swat reminds me of an old folktale. A man and his son are going on a journey with their donkey. The man makes his son sit on the donkey while he walks. On the way they come across a few people who rebuke the son for being inconsiderate and making his old father walk. So the son switches places with the father -- who gets on the donkey. The two again run into another group of people and they now chide the father for being mean to his son. So they both get on the animal. And then they encounter yet another group of travellers who scolds them for being cruel to the donkey! I believe the government is in the same situation that the father finds himself in this fable.

As for those who think the peace deal is a waste of time please go to Swat and spend a week

there just to get a feel of the life they were are living.

Tehmina Afridi

Bahawalpur

************************************

Every reasonable and decent citizen yearns for peace and security, not only in Swat, but in the whole country. Having said that, I cannot fathom what type of 'peace' can be made with the likes of the Taliban, especially when Mr Zardari himself has said that it is 'only a temporary arrangement'. This statement itself should indicate the 'value' of any such accord. More importantly, the whole Swat episode underlines the failure of the security forces to make any meaningful headway in driving the Taliban out of Swat.

This is bound to have very dire and far reaching effects for the future of Pakistan. If a band of 4,000 militants cannot be routed by a modern army then what are the chances of it fighting against a strong army from across the border?

If nothing else, at least the Taliban have proved that the whole of Pakistan may be held

hostage to such perverse elements in the not-so-distant future.

Tariq Nazir Syed

Rawalpindi

************************************

After the recent truce between the Taliban and the government, the former stopped the DCO Swat while he was on his way to Mingora along with his guards and kept him with them for some time.

They served them with a cup of tea as a token of friendship and then allowed them to continue their journey. I suggest that the head of the ruling party in NWFP, Asfandyar Wali, should also visit the Taliban in Swat and stay with them for some time, as a gesture of friendship and tradition of Pashtuns.

Mahabat Khan Bangash

Peshawar

************************************

This is with respect to the recent peace deal in Swat. Historically no deal with the Taliban has worked out. They always go back on their word. Also, the Taliban usually talk of peace when they are badly hit by security forces and are short of men, money and weapons. They do this so that the agreement can allow them to re-group and re-arm.

As soon as they do this, the peace deal breaks and terrorism resumes. Also, the religion of the Taliban is rejected by all Pakistanis since Islam does not spread by use of terrorism and force. Islam is not the religion of illiterates and in fact it emphasises the importance of education to men as well as women.

How can the government justify making a deal with the Taliban, who are in the few thousands, against the wishes of over a million Swatis? In any case, the Taliban are here to fight not to have peace. I predict that the deal will fall apart sooner or later and an even more dangerous battle will begin then. Under the Taliban, Afghanistan became an international pariah -- do we want the same to happen to us? I am afraid the deal may be the stepping stone to just that.

Amin Sheerazi

Pakistan Military Academy

Kakul

Swat peace accord not a compromise: FM

Updated at: 2145 PST, Tuesday, February 24, 2009 


WASHINGTON: Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi vowed Tuesday his government was committed to fighting extremists, despite allowing the imposition of Islamic law in part of its violence-wracked NWFP.

Foreign Minister was in Washington where he met his Afghan counterpart ahead of a three-way session with the new Obama administration designed to find a new strategy in the region.

Qureshi urged the outside world not to worry about Pakistan's Swat Valley, where pro-Taliban militants declared a unilateral ceasefire after the deal to introduce Shariah law -- their goal during nearly two years of fighting.

"It is a local solution to a local problem, which is quick dispensation of justice," Qureshi told reporters. "It is not any appeasement towards militants." "Pakistan's determination and resolve to defeat terrorism is as sound as it was," he said.

The Swat accord deal has triggered alarm in the United States, Europe, Afghanistan and India, amid concerns it will embolden militants in North West Frontier Province, which is rife with Taliban and Al-Qaeda extremists.

Source:http://thenews.jang.com.pk/updates.asp?id=69580

What the people of Swat really wanted


Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Lakhkar Khan

The writer is a resident of Swat who had to flee his home and is currently living in Lahore.

The Feb 16 agreement hasresulted in the planned promulgation of the Nizam-e-Adl regulation in Malakand division, in which Swat district is situated. The government's plea is that this is the demand of the people of Malakand division. However, those who made this announcement – in particular the ANP chief minister Amir Haider Hoti – should know that the people of Malakand division voted in favour not of Sharia but for secular, nationalist and democratic parties in the general elections of 2008.

The fact of the matter is that the ANP and the PPP contested the election on the stand that they would fight to eliminate terrorism and extremism, so it is a bit ironic that both parties have now done just the opposite. They failed to face the situation in Swat and have gone down on bended knees before the extremists.

The people of Buner, Shangla, Malakand, Lower and Upper Dir and Chitral never voted for the implementation of Sharia and did not rise up against the state for its implementation. In Buner people actually went after and killed some of the militants, and rose together as one against the extremists. And as a result of this, the militants killed over 40 people in one village of Buner alone as revenge. Despite this the people of the area never surrendered to the extremists, so they are going to be right in wondering that if they did not surrender, why has the government done just that? They ask why the state, despite having all the resources to nip this evil in the bud, chose to yield to the extremists.

Sufi Mohammad, someone who is responsible for the deaths of hundreds of young men of Malakand, was inexplicably released from prison and his crimes of the past were conveniently forgiven. He is the very person who in 1994 challenged the writ of the state to the extent that his followers killed security personnel and even an MPA. This happened in Swat and Dir but the then Sherpao government ruling the NWFP for some reason withdrew all charges against Sufi Mohammad and his colleagues. In 2001, he declared jihad against the US in Afghanistan and took several thousand of his followers there to fight. Sufi Mohammed led these young men to their deaths in Afghanistan, and was the first to leave the battlefield together with his close followers when the American B-52 bombers came. Hundred of the others who went with him lost their lives and hundreds are still missing. On his return, the political agent of Kurram Agency imprisoned him under the Frontier Crimes Regulations and that was when his son-in-law, Fazlullah, filled the gap and established a foothold in Swat.

Strange are the way of politics in this country because one day someone is a killer and the next day he is labelled as a hero – and this is done by parties that claim to be the most secular and democratic in the country.

As for Fazlullalh, we all know what he did and continues to do. He challenged the state's authority and his followed killed police constables, and army and paramilitary personnel in a most brutal manner. His group bombed schools and bridges, as well as the houses and hujras of many who tried to stand up to them. They deliberately targeted social, political and moderate religious figures and journalists in the district and many were killed and the rest compelled to leave Swat. Hundreds of thousands of people, like myself, were dislodged from their homes, and had to flee Swat. Most are now living a miserable life in other areas of Pakistan, and despite the so-called peace deal they are not sure if they can return to their homes. Not only were people's lives and property were destroyed, the region's whole economy was devastated by the terrorists. Fruit orchards went to waste because people were too afraid to work in the fields, and local businesses suffered immensely because tourism vanished. Over 2,000 innocent people, including many women and children, were killed and thousands were disabled and wounded in indiscriminate shelling and firing by security forces and the militants. As a result of the barbaric actions of Fazlullah and his followers, the centuries-old soft image of Swat and its inhabitants, based on its rich heritage dating back to its Buddhist and Swat-state eras, was lost forever. Did the government consider all this when it chose to capitulate to the extremists? What the people of Swat wanted was for the government to ensure that those behind all these murders and mayhem are held accountable for their crimes.

This brutality and carnage will not be forgotten easily by the people of Swat. It has taken its toll not just in physical terms but also on the mental wellbeing of the people of the area whose minds have been scarred. The mental health of women and children in particularly has been damaged by the actions of the militants and the incessant violence that they indulged in.

It is abominable that the government is actually now going to declare a general amnesty for Fazullah and his men, people who are directly responsible for all these deaths and atrocities that were inflicted on the people of Swat in the last two years. In this instance I would like to quote from one of this newspaper's recent editorials following the so-called peace deal. "Fazlullah's numerous acts of violence, his attempts to stifle learning and the way in which he targeted the most vulnerable citizens, show that he indeed cares nothing for Islam – a religion that advocates kindness for the oppressed, emphasises the significance of learning and lays down rules of respect for women, for minorities and even for enemies…. It seems obvious the ignorant forces of Fazlullah seek only power and are willing to use any means to obtain this." This is precisely what the people of Swat think of Fazlullah and his men, but for obvious reasons were not able to articulate or demonstrate in public.

And what is the end result now? What is one to make of this deal? That Fazlullah has emerged victorious. And that both the federal and provincial governments are taking credit for the promulgation of Sharia in Swat. As for the people, they see this as nothing but an abject surrender to the forces of obscurantism and darkness, a surrender which presents a bleak future for the people of the area.

Sufi Mohammed is now the officially-sanctioned saviour of the people, but what about the people themselves? They have lost everything and gained nothing. And I say this because the deal gives them nothing in terms of holding accountable all those who killed, butchered and slaughtered hundreds of Swatis. Who will heal their bleeding hearts and souls? Certainly not this agreement.

The fear is that the militants will not remain confined to Malakand but will demand the same deal in the settled areas of the NWFP and in FATA as well. And they will use the same tactics and brutal force against the security forces and the people as they did in Swat. What will our politicians do then? Will they bow before them again? Or will they exercise the state's authority? It shouldn't take too long to wonder what the likely option will be, keeping in mind the Swat experience.

The people of Swat ask why the state is silent, rather than ensuring their rights, and why it treats those who are murderers and criminals and those who took up arms against the state as born-again heroes. They ask why this is done. What message is sent to those who abide by the law and want to have nothing to do with these militants and born-again heroes?

The people of Swat also say that financial compensation as is being announced by the government will not help heal the wounds. But what will is an independent high-level judicial probe into what happened in Swat, followed by accountability of those involved in the killings and violence. This is what the agreement should really be providing them – not the space and the legitimacy to the militants which is what they think has happened.

Email: lakhkarkhan51@yahoo.com

 

Source:http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=164233

Payment to Swat victims soon: Hoti

Tuesday, February 24, 2009


PESHAWAR: NWFP Chief Minister Ameer Haidar Khan Hoti on Monday said the process of distribution of payment among the victims of Swat will start soon and funds for this purpose will shortly be released.

“The process of rehabilitation and development of the victims will be completed with the passage of time,” he said during a meeting with a delegation of the Swat District Bar Association at his office.

On the occasion, provincial ministers Wajid Ali Khan and Ayub Khan Ashari, MPA Dr Shamsher, renowned legal expert Abdul Latif Afridi and Peshawar High Court Bar Association’s General Secretary Esa Khan were also present.

The delegation applauded the efforts of Hoti and his government for restoring peace in Swat, reinforcing government’s writ and announcing Adl Regulation. The delegation assured the chief minister that the lawyer community will support the government’s efforts.

ìThe people of Swat have rendered great sacrifices and the conditions there are gradually changing to normalcy. Our first priority is to compensate the relatives of the Shuhadas and the injured, for which a committee is established,” said the chief minister.

Citing the provisions of Adl Regulation, the chief minister said that for providing speedy justice to the people, the civil and criminal cases will be decided in six and four months, respectively.

Source:http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=164203

Restoration of peace in Swat top priority, says minister


Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Khalid Kheshgi

PESHAWAR: The return of peace to the volatile Swat valley is more important than anything else  for the NWFP Minister for Environment Wajid Ali Khan, whose younger brother had also been shot  dead a few months ago and he personally received life threats for the stand his nationalist  party had adopted against militants in the province.

Receiving party workers and people form his constituency at his office in Peshawar Monday,  Wajid looked more comfortable and hopeful about the latest development taking place in district  Swat after the ANP-led government announced implementation of Nizam-e-Adl Regulation in the  erstwhile Malakand Division and Kohistan district of Hazara Division.

“If anyone has still doubts about the peace agreement in Swat, then they should ask for the  value of peace from Swatis, who had witnessed human and material losses during the one and  half-year clashes between military and militants,” he replied when asked about the future of  Swat in the presence of activists of defunct Tazeem Nifaz Shariat-e-Muhammadi (TNSM) and the  banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).

The minister said that there would be life, ideology, politics and development works when there  was peace in a society, adding, that the Awami National Party was committed to its pledge of  restoring peace to the province.

The ANP suffered the most for its stand against militancy and insurgency and only in Swat over  100 party local leaders and workers had been killed for the last six months, he said, and added  that sacrifices for a true cause were not new to the ANP and his family.

Wajid Ali Khan’s younger brother, Farooq Khan, who was serving in the Police Department as an  inspector was shot dead by unknown persons on a busy road in Mingora. The provincial minister  did not attend his brother’s funeral for security reasons and the threats he received from  Swat-based Taliban.

The firebrand cleric Maulana Fazlullah also summoned more than 40 politicians and MPAs,  including Wajid Ali Khan, to his self-established Shariah courts for holding them responsible  for the deaths and destruction in Swat. Wajid, who also has the Forest ministry, said those who  were criticising the ANP for deviating from its basic principle as secular party for supporting  Shariah courts had ignored another aspect the Pakhtun nationalist party, which sought safety of  its people and peace of the soil. “We are not doing politics in the name of religion but are  bound to honour mandate of the people who had voted us for restoring peace to the province  through political means,” he said.

About the death of journalist Musa Khankhel and alleged kidnapping of a high-ranking officer  along with body guards in Swat, the minister said some elements were out to vitiate the  atmosphere in Swat where they fear that government’s writ and cooperation of the religious  groups would definitely put at stake their nefarious designs.

 

Source:http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=164190

Deal in Swat


Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Mir Jamilur Rahman

The NWFP government's signing of the agreement with the Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Muhammadi has brought instant peace to the troubled areas of Malakand and Kohistan and a ceasefire in Swat. It has been explained that the main cause of turmoil was the denial of speedy justice to the people. The agreement takes care of that.

The Swat accord is not surrender and capitulation by the government, nor was the violence an insurgency for separation from Pakistan. It is a farfetched supposition that a different judicial system in Swat will lead to disintegration of the country. In fact, President Zardari, for the first time, has acted as a statesman rather than a politician. The insurgency was splitting the nation. It was damaging our newfound democracy. It was hampering our efforts against terrorism. If the agreement puts a stop to the mayhem, it is a substantive victory for the people of Pakistan.

The religious-political leaders do not believe in democracy. Maulana Sufi Muhammad considers democracy against Sharia and thus un-Islamic. The majority of other religious leaders also think the same way. They think that they can never reach power through democracy. Hence, many have come to the conclusion that power could only be won through weapons. The perennial war in Afghanistan and resultant instability has given them an opportunity to test their mettle. However, they can raise turmoil but not sustain insurgency for long. So, they do not hesitate to sign agreements. It gives them time to regroup and start all over again.

Some opinion leaders have expressed the apprehension that by giving a different judicial system to Swat and Malakand, the government is sowing the seeds of division and subsequently separation. They cannot be more wrong. There are quite a few countries in the world where more than one judicial system is working satisfactorily. The UK does not have a single, unified judicial system. – England and Wales have one system, Scotland another and Northern Ireland a third.

Unfortunately, the concept of "speedy justice" is misconceived and cannot be turned into reality in Pakistan for a long time to come. Pakistan just does not have the means to provide speedy justice to people, just as it cannot provide "speedy education" and "speedy healthcare." In comparison to our population, our judicial machinery is too small.

The United Kingdom is three times smaller in population than Pakistan – the UK is 60 million and Pakistan 173 million – but its judicial network is much vaster than ours. In England and Wales (combined population 55 million) there are roughly 30,000 magistrates (Justices of Peace) to dispense justice. They deal with 95 percent of criminal cases. They also settle family disputes. The cases are decided in hours. One cannot get speedier than that.

In Pakistan court hearing could be postponed and a new date given on the most frivolous of excuses, with the result that the case lingers on for ages. This cannot happen in England. Although there is no law that forbids postponement, the party that seeks postponement has to bear the cost of the lost day, including the opponent's legal fee, which is quite substantial. That is how the judiciary in the UK has been able to speed up the legal process.

In Pakistan people are suffering from every sort of shortages – food, education, and healthcare. Schools, universities, hospitals and courts are all overcrowded. There is no short-term solution to the problem of a rising population and diminishing social sector. The government ought to come out with a White Paper to propose ways and means to overcome this gigantic problem, otherwise the story of Swat will be repeated everywhere in Pakistan,

Senate: A thoughtful action by PPP, PML-N and MQM has instantly removed the corruption that engulfs the Senate elections every 3 years. These parties had decided to field candidates as per their numerical strength in the provincial assemblies. Thus the Senators from Sindh and now Punjab have been elected unopposed. It is a day of sorrow for PMLQ. Its 18 Senators had retired and in return it got just one Senator, thanks to the brilliant leadership of Ch Pervaiz Elahi. His party PMLQ is now on the brink of extinction.

The writer is a freelance columnist. Email: mirjrahman@hotmail.com

Source:http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=164232

Four FC men among 7 seized in Mingora

MINGORA - At least seven persons including four personnel of the security forces and two activists of ruling Awami National Party (ANP) were abducted by unknown persons here from two different areas on Monday.
The officials and local people informed that four security personnel were kidnapped from Dheri area, Kanju, while three were abducted from historical Odegram town, Mingora. The three civilians included ANP stalwarts Bakht Ghulam and Akbar Zaman, and a bank manager Yousaf. So far no one has claimed the responsibility for the incidents.
AFP adds: Pakistani paramilitary forces Monday killed 10 Taliban militants in a tribal area bordering Afghanistan and destroyed more than a dozen vehicles and a main communications system, officials said.
“The security forces targeted a militant hideout in Khyber tribal district and killed 10 militants,” a security official told AFP.
It was not possible to confirm the death toll independently.
“The militants’ main communication system and their 15 vehicles were also destroyed in the strike,” the official said.
Elsewhere, security forces captured the “strategically important” Bachina heights in the Bajaur tribal district that had been under militant control for a long time, he added.

Source: http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/Politics/24-Feb-2009/Four-FC-men-among-7-seized-in-Mingora

Militants declare indefinite ceasefire in Swat

Febuary 24, 2009

Pro-Taliban militants on Tuesday declared an indefinite ceasefire in Swat valley, where they have been fighting for nearly two years to enforce sharia law, a spokesman said. The announcement came after militant leader Maulana Fazlullah convened a consultative council in Swat's Matta district, spokesman Muslim Khan told a foreign news agency. "Today the shoora met under Maulana Fazlullah and decided to hold a ceasefire for an indefinite period," Khan told foreign news agency. The hardliners had been observing a temporary, 10-day ceasefire since last Monday, when the Pakistani government signed a controversial deal with a pro-Taliban cleric to enforce sharia law in Swat in an effort to restore peace. "We are releasing all prisoners unconditionally. Today we released four paramilitary soldiers and we will release all security personnel in our custody as a goodwill gesture," Khan vowed.

Source:http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/Regional/Islamabad/24-Feb-2009/Militants-declare-indefinite-ceasefire-in-Swat

Monday, February 23, 2009

Re-opened Schools Pictures / Feb 24, 2009

Pakistani girls assemble in a private school in Mingora, capital of troubled Swat valley in Pakistan on Monday, Feb. 23, 2009. A hardline cleric dispatched by Pakistan to negotiating a peace deal with the Taliban said the right of above fourth grade girls to attend school was still under discussion.

AP Photo by Sherin Zada

Students read books in their classroom after their school was reopened in Swat Valley February 23, 2009. The Pakistan army said on Monday it had ceased operations against Taliban militants in the northwestern valley of Swat, and an Islamist cleric asked for troops to be shifted to "safer places" to give peace a chance.

Reuters Pictures by REUTERS

Students attend prayers after their school reopened in Swat Valley February 23, 2009. The Pakistan army said on Monday it had ceased operations against Taliban militants in the northwestern valley of Swat, and an Islamist cleric asked for troops to be shifted to "safer places" to give peace a chance.

Reuters Pictures by REUTERS

 

Pakistani girls gather in a private school in Mingora, capital of the troubled Swat valley in Pakistan on Monday, Feb. 23, 2009. A hardline cleric dispatched by Pakistan to negotiate a peace deal with the Taliban said the right of above fourth grade girls to attend school was still under discussion.

AP Photo by Sherin Zada

 

Students read books after their school was reopened in Swat Valley February 23, 2009. The Pakistan army said on Monday it had ceased operations against Taliban militants in the northwestern valley of Swat, and an Islamist cleric asked for troops to be shifted to "safer places" to give peace a chance.

Reuters Pictures by REUTERS

 

Students take part in physical training after their school was reopened in Swat Valley February 23, 2009. The Pakistan army said on Monday it had ceased operations against Taliban militants in the northwestern valley of Swat, and an Islamist cleric asked for troops to be shifted to "safer places" to give peace a chance.

Reuters Pictures by REUTERS

Swat peace deal: right or wrong?

Monday, February 23, 2009


One can understand the provincial government’s desire to stop the killing and barbarism that has afflicted Swat, a problem that it inherited. What is difficult to understand is the logic behind the decision to make a deal with the violent, extremist religious groups in Swat, considering the inclusive and secular philosophy of the political parties in charge of both the central and provincial governments. The decision therefore cannot be seen as ideology driven. It is also highly unlikely that the government is moving to impose strict ‘sharia’ law, for which none of their constituents have voted for, in the rest of the country.

However, by sanctioning this deal, the central government, in particular has embarked upon a very slippery slope that will erode its authority and hard-earned democratic mandate, more so than some other unfulfilled election promises such as the restoration of the constitution or judiciary. The consequence of this expedient decision is the re-enforcement of the ‘might-is-right’ principle and for every two bit extremist, wishing to extract their pound of flesh, to engage in further violence.

The fundamental question is not whether the ceasefire will hold in Swat, but whose interpretation of Sharia the federal and NWFP governments have just sanctioned. And what may occur when this comes into conflict with some other groups’ interpretation? This is almost a certainty, self-evident by the existence of numerous religious groups and religio-political parties in Pakistan.

R Matif

London

*****

This is with reference to the argument that since the UK negotiated with the IRA and Sri Lanka with the LTTE, there is no harm in talking to the Taliban. What is forgotten is that neither the UK nor Sri Lanka handed over any territory to their rebels, as Pakistan has done in Swat. By allowing militants to retain control of Swat, we have in effect accepted that we are not able to defend the motherland. We shouldn’t be surprised if our major cities are swamped by madressah students demanding that they should be given powers to run the country in accordance with their version of Islam.

Shakir Lakhani

Karachi

*****

Many people are asking whether the Taliban in Swat who committed many atrocities will be brought to justice. This is all well and good but what about the security forces? Will those responsible for the many civilian deaths in the valley also be held accountable?

Ziaullah Rahmani

Swat

Source: http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=164098

Deal brings hope to Swat

Monday, February 23, 2009
by Khalid Munir

After one-and-a-half year of military operation, an initiative has been taken to bring lasting peace to Swat. For those away from Swat, it amounts to surrendering to the Taliban, but for the people of Swat this deal brings hope that normalcy may return to the valley. They would have welcomed anyone and any move to bring peace. Ironically, that was exactly the reason for the Taliban success in Afghanistan in 1995-96. For Swatis the deal has brought peace for the time being and they are content with it.

Lasting peace in Swat is a distant possibility. The government has placed all its eggs in Maulana Sufi Mohammad’s basket and the overwhelming reception he has received in Swat must have elevated the hopes of the government about his ability to deliver long-lasting peace. However, it is not that simple. Maulana Sufi Mohammad has entered Swat’s arena after nine long years. He left for Afghanistan to fight the Americans in 2001 and was arrested after his return to Pakistan. Swat’s worsening situation compelled the government to release him a couple of months back. He does not believe in violence. The Taliban could not have taken control of Mingora if a fraction of the crowd now cheering Sufi Mohammad had stood up to the militants.

This raises the question about the quantum of clout and influence of Maulana Sufi Mohammad. In 1994 he was pitched against the Pakistan Army, which follows rules, ethics and a code of conduct even against the enemy. Sufi and his men were Pakistanis. Now he has to deal with the Taliban, who are loosely knitted, never heard or bothered to follow the Geneva Convention and do not have a concept of right and wrong, because in their opinion whatever they think is right. Ironically, most of the people I have spoken to are optimistic about the success of the peace talks merely for the reason that Sufi Mohammad happens to be Fazlullah’s father-in-law. However, these people forget the fact that this relationship did not stop Fazlullah from going off on his own till now. Also, in Pakhtun culture, one’s father-in-law does not carry the same status as in other societies in Pakistan.

Leaving aside the relationship, what does Maulana Sufi Mohammad have to offer the Taliban? The Nizam-e-adl? Did anyone ever hear the Taliban demanding enforcement of Nizam-e-adl? This was never explicitly on their agenda, so why should they concede the power they have gained over the last two years for something they had never asked for? Sufi Mohammad will bring back a long list of impossible-to-implement demands from the Taliban and that is when things will start deteriorating again. And in any case, the government could have negotiated directly with the Taliban – if that indeed was the goal.

As far as Maulana Fazalullah is concerned, we are in the dark about certain basic things about his organisation. Is there a guarantee that his men will abide by whatever is eventually agreed upon? Also, the exact strength of his outfit remains unknown. What is the composition of the men under his command in terms of ethnicity and geographical origin? In rest of the NWFP, normally the Taliban operate in a group of 15 to 20 with a commander or amir. What I fear is that he may become another Maulana Ghazi of Lal Masjid, who as according to the media reports during the mosque’s siege wanted to leave the mosque but certain people in the mosque and the government did not let him finalise a deal.

Lastly, the government and Taliban must ensure the safety of Maulana Sufi Mohammad. With the involvement of so many foreign agencies and the dismay shown by a few countries, anything is possible. God forbid, any unfortunate incident may light an inferno which will be difficult to put out.

The writer is a retired lieutenant-colonel. Email: khalidmunirkhan @gmail.com

Source: http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=164111

Turnout low as schools in Pakistan's Swat reopen


Feb 24, 2009

All boys' and some girls' schools reopened in Pakistan's Swat valley on Monday but despite a truce between the government and insurgents security fears kept attendance low, officials said. Only 40 percent of students showed up for school, said Ziauddin Yusufzai, the spokesman for the private schools association. "This is because of the recent (unstable) situation. Another reason is that many families are still frightened and thousands more left the valley because of the fighting," he told. Thousands of Islamist hardliners have spent nearly two years waging a terrifying campaign to enforce sharia law in Swat, beheading opponents, bombing girls' schools, outlawing entertainment and fighting government forces. Last Monday, the government signed an agreement with a pro-Taliban cleric agreeing to enforce sharia in the valley in the hope of ending the insurgency. All boys' schools formally reopened on Monday, one week earlier than the scheduled start of term after the long winter holiday. In government-run girls' schools, only the primary section up to the fourth grade opened, local officials said. But all private girls' schools reopened, Yusufzai said. Residents said girls attended classes veiled after militant leader Maulana Fazlullah announced on his illegal radio station that girls could take examinations, but only after covering themselves according to sharia. Most private schools in Swat are concentrated in and around the main town Mingora. There has been no co-education in the valley for several years and schools have created separate sections with different entry and exit gates for boys and girls. Militant spokesman Muslim Khan said girls could go to school provided they observe "purdah" -- the practice of total separation from men and boys.

 

Source:http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/Politics/23-Feb-2009/Turnout-low-as-schools-in-Pakistans-Swat-reopen

We are in favour of Swat peace accord, says Nawaz

Updated at: 1950 PST, Monday, February 23, 2009 


LAHORE: Pakistan Muslim League (N) leader Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif said Monday, our party is in favour of Swat peace pact and added, “We pray that it should turn fruitful”.

Addressing a 12-member delegation from Punjab Union of Journalists (PUJ) he said, the crisis in Pakistan may widen and deepen in case Swat peace pact failed to accomplish its goals.

Nawaz hoped media to play its positive role in making the lawyers’ long march a great success.

Chief Minister Punjab Mian Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif on the occasion announced increase in annual grant of PUJ from 200,000 rupees to 500,000 rupees.

Source: http://thenews.jang.com.pk/updates.asp?id=69454

Strike deal with Taliban on Swat pattern: Imran to US

2/23/2009

Imran Khan has counseled US to strike a deal with Taliban in Afghanistan on the pattern of Swat pact, saying that the real threat was from al-Qaeda. "The only way forward is dialogue, which is what (Afghan President) Hamid Karzai is finally saying. You have to start talking to the Taliban," Khan said. He warned that US President Barack Obama's Afghan policy is "exactly the same way as the mess" made by the previous Bush administration. Pakistan had "absolutely no choice" other than to strike a deal with Taliban in Swat. "My biggest worry is that the Obama administration is going exactly the same way as the mess made by the Bush administration. Its like the line from Alice in Wonderland. When you dot know where you're, every road takes you there," Khan was quoted as saying by CNN in an interview. Khan termed the peace deal with Taliban as "fairly moderate". He also asked Obama to stop the drone attacks inside Pakistani tribal areas, saying there can be no military solution to insurgency. "The Americans should have isolated al-Qaeda from the Taliban. The Taliban had nothing to do with terrorism. Yes, they were fundamentalists. But they were not terrorists." "The US attacks against the Taliban and then not being able to deliver on the promises of good governance system, brought things to the current mess in Afghanistan," he added.

Source:http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/Politics/23-Feb-2009/Strike-deal-with-Taliban-on-Swat-pattern-Imran-to-US

Does the Swat deal promise peace or more conflict?


In the national interest

Monday, February 23, 2009
by Kamal Siddiqi

The writer is editor reporting, The News

The deal between the government and the Tehreek-e-Nifaz Shariat-e-Muhammadi has drawn a variety of responses from within the country and abroad. Stakeholders have welcomed the move in some quarters while in others there has been outright condemnation. Our well meaning but clueless politicians have hailed it as a major political initiative of the president. One wonders whether this is indeed the case.

Generally, many people in the valley have welcomed the deal. Most have done so not on the merit of the agreement but more in the hope that it will bring peace. The people of Swat are shaken. The daily toll of beheaded bodies in Green Chowk in Mingora, which has been renamed “Zibah-Khana Chowk,” continues. There are unsubstantiated stories of assault of women in parts of Swat, which only add to the sense of anger and frustration.

People do not talk against the Taliban or the extremists in public for fear of being targeted. The area has become a state within a state. Some allege that the army targets civilians more than it does the Taliban. These are things on which one cannot comment much, only wonder. There is fear and there is anger.

In reaction to the peace deal, many people not living in the valley have rejected it, saying that the government has capitulated to extremist elements. They say that this may have a snowballing effect on the area as more and more parts of the NWFP are given to the Taliban or other forces. The deal, they argue, will bring more violence in the long run.

While there can be much debate on the merits of entering into any such agreement, one thing that is clear is that the peace deal is not an open-and-shut affair. The government wants us to believe that it is the beginning of the state of normalcy to the area. One can only hope that this is so.

There are many questions that remain unanswered. The NWFP chief minister has said in a press conference in Peshawar that it was a historic deal and one that is the first step to normalcy. He was clearly upset with the questioning of the reporters. It seemed he too was not altogether convinced of the merits of this move. For his part, President Zardari has said that it should not be seen as a sign of weakness for the government. But some weeks back we had been told that there would be no compromise. And yet, now we seem to be seeing the same.

As things stand it seems that the answers are not forthcoming. For starters, why has the government entered into a deal with a group that has been advocating and allegedly practicing violence as a means to an end for so long? Were these persons part of the senseless killings that took place there over the past couple of years? Should we be negotiating with those who promoted violent means while all along we have said we will talk only to those who talk peace? What message are we giving to the peace-mongers?

In this deal that has come to be, the families of victims, and there are quite a few, are within their right to ask the government how those who killed someone’s near and dear ones will be brought to justice. They would like to know what the status of these murders will be and will they ever be investigated to bring the perpetrators to justice.

Take, for example, the killers of Shabana, a wedding dancer. Her throat was slit and her body left as an example to others. Will her murderers be allowed to go scot free? Hundreds of policemen, government servants and private citizens were shot, injured, terrorised or killed. What happens to those who did this?

This whole peace agreement sets a bad example for others if there is no provision to bring to justice those who bombed, killed, attacked and maimed. In this manner, it encourages others who are following the same violent path and who, inevitably, will also end up signing deals with the government. The deal gives them a clean slate.

The issue of killings and accountability for actions past and present should have featured in the final agreement. Another point is why the government negotiated from a position of weakness when all along it has been claiming that it was in a position of strength. The wording of the agreement clearly shows that the government has gone out of the way not to offend the other side and committed to things that should not have been conceded.

Another pertinent matter is whether the TNSM has the ability to deliver in the areas it has promised. Will Maulvi Sufi Mohommad be able to convince Maulvi Fazlullah to lay down his arms? Does the TNSM have the strength to silence the Taliban outfits in the valley, and, if not, how will it help the government do so?

From the tragic killing of our colleague, Musa Khankhel, and the other attacks and bombings following the signing of the agreement, what seems apparent is that not everyone is on board. The killing of Musa Khankhel is a clear signal to the government that there are still many within Swat who want to escalate the violence. Will we let them do so?

For the government, the biggest issue is not only whether the deal can be honoured but what happens if it breaks down. Who guarantees such deals and what are the penalties for violations? Even more pertinent is the question as to who would punish the parties that break the agreement and what would be the parameters of the punishment.

Then there is the issue of the implementation of the Islamic laws and the appointment of judicial officers. Merely changing the titles from Judge to Qazi will not satisfy the hardliners. Who will arrest, sentence and accord the punishment. This is all up in the air.

For Pakistanis, the more pressing issue is how the government has allowed a different system of justice within the country. One can only wonder at what this will do to further complicate the search for justice for the common man. It is clear that while the stipulation of a time frame will help ensure speedy justice, how will this judicial system work within the larger framework? These are questions that the people of Swat would want to ask.

Another logical worry for the people of Swat Valley is whether the peace will last. For most Western countries as well as regional powers, there is a fear that this deal is yet another attempt by the extremists to buy time and cut their losses. As a bonus, they have managed to secure a sweetheart deal from the government.

One can ask, and rightly so, what the long-term objectives of the militants and the religious extremists are. If we look at the history of these deals, it is clear that they are a stopgap arrangement, in many instances, a tactic to buy time or to focus on another operation. There are fears that this deal will allow the militants to focus once again on cross-border activities.

What we do know is that the army operation, despite the collateral damage, was hitting hard at the militants. But at the same time, there were many in Swat who were saying that things were not as clear as they are made out to be. Who do we believe and whose side are we on?

Finally, what is the game plan of the government? It says one thing but does another. We will continue to suffer from such ad hocism or will we follow a more long-drawn-out option which will give us results in many years, but these would be such that are long-lasting and durable. Maulana Fazlur Rehman, an important player on the NWFP political scene, says that the proposed implementation of Shariah laws in Swat conveys to the world that legislation is not acceptable through democratic process but through use of force. That seems to be the crux of the matter.

Email: kamal.siddiqi@thenews.com.pk

Source: http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=164112