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"Let there arise out of you a band of people inviting to all that is good enjoining what is right and forbidding what is wrong; they are the ones to attain felicity".
(surah Al-Imran,ayat-104)
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User Name: Noman
Full Name: Noman Zafar
User since: 1/Jan/2007
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 Reply:   Running Out of Optionsscript
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (7/Nov/2006)
Musharraf has tried both hard and soft tactics to stamp out radicalism along Pakistan's border. Neither has worked

Running Out of Options

Musharraf has tried both hard and soft tactics to stamp out radicalism along Pakistan's border. Neither has worked.

 Predicament: Graves of those killed in Chinagai
Ali Imam / Reuters
Predicament: Graves of those killed in Chinagai
 
  MSNBC.com
Newsweek.com

Pakistan's Troublesome Borders
Musharraf has tried both hard and soft tactics to stamp out radicalism along Pakistan's border. Neither has worked.
By Zahid Hussain
Newsweek International
Nov. 13, 2006 issue - It was just before dawn when the residents of Chinagai, a small border village in the Bajaur tribal area, woke up to a thunderous blast. Then came three more explosions in quick succession. The missile attack reduced a local seminary known as Madrassa Ziaul Uloom to a huge pile of rubble. Some 85 people died"”including several children"”in the single deadliest operation launched by Pakistani forces against suspected militants in the country's lawless tribal region. Pakistani military officials said the madrassa was being used to train suicide bombers for attacks in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
The missile strike provoked a strong backlash in the border region"”and exposed a troubling reality for Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf: he has run out of options in the fight against rampant radicalism along his country's rugged western border. Thousands of armed Pashtuns took to the streets in Bajaur to protest the attack, and the demonstrations spilled over to parts of North-West Frontier province, which is ruled by a radical Islamic alliance known as the Muttehida Majlis Amal (MMA). Islamists, angered by the rumor that U.S. military drones had bombed the Chinagai madrassa, whipped up anti-American sentiments in the region. "It has basically provided a propaganda tool to Taliban and Pakistani Islamists to gain sympathy," says Samina Ahmed, country director of the Brussels-based International Crisis Group.
A senior Pakistani security official called the bombing a "major counter-terrorist operation" carried out on the basis of intelligence provided by the Americans. U.S. drones had picked up unusual activity"”roughly 100 men undergoing some kind of guerrilla training in the compound. A high-resolu- tion camera also detected a middle-aged bearded man delivering a lecture to the trainees. U.S. and Pakistani intelligence officials suspected he could be Qaeda No. 2 Ayman al-Zawahiri or fellow jihadist Abu al-Obaida al Misri. The two Qaeda leaders had regularly visited the mountainous region, only 15 kilometers from the Afghan border. (Misri is believed to be the mastermind behind a plot this summer to blow up several jetliners flying out of London's Heathrow airport.) But there has been no indication yet that any Qaeda operatives were killed in the strike.
Musharraf has switched tactics in trying to deal with the Islamists along the border, alternating from military action to peace deals and now, apparently, back to armed force. Neither approach has worked. At the heart of Musharraf's predicament is the failure of his plan to pacify pro-Taliban tribesmen in Waziristan with a peace accord. In September the Pakistani government signed a controversial truce agreement, ending a three-year-long military campaign in troubled north Waziristan in return for a pledge by tribal leaders not to give shelter to foreign fighters. But in effect, the deal only empowered the local Taliban, who have been actively involved in the Afghan insurgency.
Musharraf made the deal under pressure from his Army, which had grown disenchanted with the occupation of north Waziristan and a lack of progress in pacifying the region. Around 700 soldiers have been killed in the area, and at least six middle-ranking Army officers have been court-martialed for refusing to fight.
Pakistani officials argue that the ceasefire should create the conditions for economic development in Waziristan and elsewhere. Islamabad plans to invest millions of dollars in improving infrastructure, as well as the health and education systems, in the tribal areas, which may also help to create jobs for the tribesmen. Poverty is the fuel for militancy in the border regions. Less than 30 percent of the tribesmen attend school of any kind. And of those who do, 90 percent drop out of primary school.
But Musharraf's policy of appeasement does not seem to be working. Far from taming the cross-border violence, the Waziristan truce appears to have contributed to deteriorating conditions in the eastern Afghan border provinces of Khowst, Paktia and Paktika. U.S. and Afghan officials maintain that the truce has made it easier for militants to send fighters and weapons across the border. "How can one expect to carry out any development work in this situation?" asks Hasan Askari Rizvi, an author and columnist for The Daily Times, an English-language newspaper.
The ICG's Ahmed says Musharraf's policy swings are "counterproductive. " What might work? Maybe nothing, say experts. Any further military operation in the border areas could split the Army. And left alone, the Islamists continue to pursue jihad. Caught between the almost medieval religious fanaticism of the Islamists, a disenchanted Army and the pressing Americans, Musharraf is in a very tight spot indeed.

 
 Reply:   Fewer Pakistanis rally to supp
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (7/Nov/2006)
Why, are we fed up or we have lost hearts? this is very long battle, why we Pakistani Muslims are not supporting Muslims? why we are still waiting for miracles? wht we are not standing again

Fewer Pakistanis rally to support Islamists

In the wake of an attack on a tribal-area school, Islamists are unable to stir up indignation nationwide.
By David Montero | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN
For a week after missiles destroyed a madrassah, or religious school, in Pakistan's tribal belt suspected of harboring al-Qaeda officers, thousands of angry men, many armed, have stormed through the area's main towns, chanting jihad against America and endorsing suicide attacks.
But hundreds of miles away, in the cosmopolitan cities of Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad, relative silence has prevailed.
The difference in response is telling, observers say. It underscores not only an important gap in understanding between the tribal areas and the rest of the country - a gulf that helps keep the area underdeveloped and prone to extremism - but an erosion of the Islamist parties' power on the national stage.
"[The Islamist parties] have used this opportunity to divert people's attention. But in other provinces, people have not responded to the call. They're fed up," says Afrasiab Khattak, former chairman of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan.
It was supposed to be a raucous week. Fresh on the heels of last Monday's missile attack, the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA), the main coalition of religious parties and the ruling entity in the semi-autonomous North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) and Balochistan, called for nationwide protests, hoping to stoke the fires of religious sentiment.
In Bajaur and other areas of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), they got what they wanted. Thousands massed for days in several towns, carrying weapons and calling for jihad. It was even announced that a suicide-bomb squad was preparing to attack the Pakistani military.
As the protests raged, militants in North Waziristan, who recently brokered a peace deal with the government, moved to solidify their power. They passed out leaflets in several towns announcing the establishment of a "Mujahideen Shura" or council to institute "Allah's law in Allah's land," according to local press reports. At least two men suspected of spying for American forces were killed in North Waziristan last week, while several other government-linked tribesmen were shot dead, allegedly for aiding the government's efforts to oust militants.
But this anger, while certainly significant, barely projected beyond the tribal zone. In Islamabad, there were hardly any protests to be seen. Lahore, a city of 10 million, saw a turnout of 500. In Karachi, 5,000 shouted slogans, hardly significant for a metropolis of 15 million.
This contrasts sharply with past protests. In January, when another militant hideout was targeted by the CIA in Bajaur, 10,000 people flooded the streets of Karachi to protest. Not long afterward, the MMA summoned 15,000 protesters in Lahore alone when the controversy over the Danish cartoons erupted, although many speculate that widespread discontent with the government, and not mere religious sentiment, brought them to the streets.
Still, many observers see it as a sign that the power of religious parties over public anger has diminished. The MMA came to power in the NWFP and Balochistan in 2002 on the promise that they would resist Western-oriented foreign policy and govern according to the tenets of Islam. But many of the MMA parties, particularly Jamaat-Ulema- Islami (JUI) - which dominates politics in the North-West Frontier Province, Balochistan, and the tribal zone - have slowly cozied up in recent months to President Gen. Pervez Musharraf's military regime. Such compromises have ultimately undermined their claims to independent credentials, analysts point out. That's perhaps one reason why last week's calls for nationwide strikes were dismissed as pure political play.
"People now realize that they're just doing politics rather than really showing their mettle. They're just using the occasion," says Behroz Khan, a journalist and analyst in Peshawar who writes for Pakistan's The News. Government officials last week echoed this refrain.
"The MMA has already seen that people have rejected their strike call a day before and will not take to the streets today," Muhammad Ali Durrani, the information minister, told a press conference last week. Pakistani authorities had suspected the madrassah of harboring al-Qaeda officers.
Leaders of Jamaat Islami, the MMA's central party, deny these accusations, saying their power is as strong as ever.
"The people believe in Jamaat Islami because ... they have strong leadership and commitment," says Siraj-ul-Haq, a Jamaat Islami leader and member of the provincial assembly in the NWFP. He added that if protests have been muted, it is only because the MMA is working slowly toward its goal of building a nationwide protest movement.
"We are sure we will succeed to organize a new agitation throughout the country," he says.
Certainly, Pakistanis at large condemn last week's missile strike, arguing that the militants should have been arrested. But street protests will continue to founder because, besides the MMA's political weakness, many Pakistanis are only mildly concerned with events in FATA, say analysts. As far as many Pakistanis are concerned, the tribal zone may as well be a different country.

 
 Reply:   PAK GOVT IS A GANG OF COWARDS
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (5/Nov/2006)
PAK GOVT IS A GANG OF COWARDS AND BOOTLICKERS -- LIAQAT BALOCH
 

 
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