TalibanSwatter
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The News - Editorial
There can be few more heartening sights than the bustling bazaars of Mingora during the Independence Day celebrations. If ever we needed an indicator that things had changed for the better, this was it. The curfew was relaxed; people were out on the streets celebrating for the first time in three years, more for some what the Taliban never allowed them to celebrate. Pakistani flags flew from rooftops, bunting laced the streets and in another sign of change women were outdoors celebrating as well. Reporters from private TV stations had been invited in by the army in a surprisingly well-judged PR exercise, and smartly dressed policemen got themselves interviewed. Public buildings and private houses were festooned with lights and children strutted their stuff on-stage at the Wadoodia Hall in Saidu Sharif. The Swat valley at last had something to celebrate.
None of this would have been possible were it not for a determined and sustained effort by the armed forces, who remain in strength as guarantors of the still-fragile peace. We have sustained substantial casualties, military and civilian, in the fight to win back the Swat valley and nothing will bring back the dead or ease the grief for those who have lost loved ones. Holding the ground that has been retaken is not going to be easy and anybody who thinks that the Taliban are beaten is deluding themselves. Their leadership in Swat survives, they still have their supporters and donated money continues to arm and supply them. The police we see today in Swat have yet to properly re-establish themselves, and they need the breathing-space afforded by the military to rebuild both their own confidence and to establish the trust of a wider public. That this peaceful and beautiful place, one of our premier tourist destinations for both foreign and domestic tourists, was allowed to degenerate into an enclave of barbarism that spawned a foul brood of butchers; is a national disgrace.
Make no mistake, be not deceived, the takeover of Swat and elsewhere had support in the upper echelons of the establishment, in some political parties and elements of the media both print and electronic The takeover of Swat was not spontaneous; it was carefully conceived and brilliantly executed.
Today, we have rolled back the forces of darkness, but it has been a tough fight and we have paid dear. Let us hope that next years celebrations in Swat will be of a year of rebuilding, development, and a re-kindling of the flame of moderation and peaceful coexistence.
There can be few more heartening sights than the bustling bazaars of Mingora during the Independence Day celebrations. If ever we needed an indicator that things had changed for the better, this was it. The curfew was relaxed; people were out on the streets celebrating for the first time in three years, more for some what the Taliban never allowed them to celebrate. Pakistani flags flew from rooftops, bunting laced the streets and in another sign of change women were outdoors celebrating as well. Reporters from private TV stations had been invited in by the army in a surprisingly well-judged PR exercise, and smartly dressed policemen got themselves interviewed. Public buildings and private houses were festooned with lights and children strutted their stuff on-stage at the Wadoodia Hall in Saidu Sharif. The Swat valley at last had something to celebrate.
None of this would have been possible were it not for a determined and sustained effort by the armed forces, who remain in strength as guarantors of the still-fragile peace. We have sustained substantial casualties, military and civilian, in the fight to win back the Swat valley and nothing will bring back the dead or ease the grief for those who have lost loved ones. Holding the ground that has been retaken is not going to be easy and anybody who thinks that the Taliban are beaten is deluding themselves. Their leadership in Swat survives, they still have their supporters and donated money continues to arm and supply them. The police we see today in Swat have yet to properly re-establish themselves, and they need the breathing-space afforded by the military to rebuild both their own confidence and to establish the trust of a wider public. That this peaceful and beautiful place, one of our premier tourist destinations for both foreign and domestic tourists, was allowed to degenerate into an enclave of barbarism that spawned a foul brood of butchers; is a national disgrace.
Make no mistake, be not deceived, the takeover of Swat and elsewhere had support in the upper echelons of the establishment, in some political parties and elements of the media both print and electronic The takeover of Swat was not spontaneous; it was carefully conceived and brilliantly executed.
Today, we have rolled back the forces of darkness, but it has been a tough fight and we have paid dear. Let us hope that next years celebrations in Swat will be of a year of rebuilding, development, and a re-kindling of the flame of moderation and peaceful coexistence.