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Official Admits Militancy’s Deep Roots in Pakistan

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Official Admits Militancy’s Deep Roots in Pakistan


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Mohsin Raza/Reuters
The sister of a police officer, Zulfiqar Ali, mourned next to his coffin before his burial in Lahore, Pakistan, on Tuesday. He was killed when militants stormed a hospital on Sunday.


By JANE PERLEZ
Published: June 2, 2010

LAHORE, Pakistan — Days after one of the worst terrorist attacks in Pakistan, a senior Pakistani official declared in a surprising public admission that extremist groups were entrenched in the southern portion of the nation’s most populous province, underscoring the growing threats to the state.

The statements by the interior minister, Rehman Malik, after the killing of more than 80 people at two mosques last week here in Lahore, were exceptional because few Pakistani politicians have acknowledged so explicitly the deep roots of militancy in Pakistan. They also highlighted the seeming impotence of the civilian government to root out the militant groups, even in Punjab Province, providing a troubling recognition that decades of state policy to nurture extremism had come home to roost in the very heart of the country.

The extent of the problem has become an increasing concern for the United States, which has pressed the government to deal with the issue with renewed urgency since the failed attempt by a Pakistani-American to explode a car bomb in Times Square.

“We’re dealing with a problem that is so deeply burrowed into the bosom of the society,” said a senior Western official about the difficulty of loosening the grip of the militant groups. “And we’re dealing with a government that is unhappy within itself.”

The problem for Pakistan, Western officials and some Pakistani politicians said, is not only the specific acts of terrorism by these groups, but the far more pervasive jihadi mentality that has been nurtured in the society by an extensive network of extremist madrasas and mosques.

Mr. Malik’s remarks — in which he rattled off a host of extremist groups once supported by the state — were a nod to these larger problems. In contrast to the tribal areas at the nation’s periphery, where the military is battling the Pakistani Taliban on several fronts, militants were “now active” in the southern part of Punjab and were trying to “destabilize the country,” he said.

Though Mr. Malik seemed to hint at possible military action in Punjab, the civilian government, led by the Pakistan Peoples Party, the more secular of the political parties in Pakistan, has little leverage to make it happen.

The Pakistani military, which still holds most power, has shown little interest in taking on extremist groups in Punjab. The province is a major recruiting area for the army, and many of the militant groups there were created by the state decades ago and have been fostered since as arms of Pakistan’s enduring anti-India strategy.

To a large degree, they have slipped from the control of their handlers in the military and intelligence services, according to Western diplomats and Pakistani security experts, and have linked up with Taliban fighters and other militant groups that are now striking deeper into Pakistan in an effort to overthrow the state.

Today these militants move back and forth easily between the tribal areas for training and Punjab, where they carry out a rising number of spectacular attacks.

“They — Lashkar-e-Janghvi, the Sipah-e-Sohaba Pakistan and Jaish-e-Mohammad — are allies of the Taliban and Al Qaeda,” Mr. Malik told reporters in Lahore after the mosque attacks.

The loose conglomerate of militants that Mr. Malik listed is now being grouped by officials and others under the name of the Punjabi Taliban, a designation that itself highlights the expanding nature of the threat in Pakistan’s most important province and the militants’ shifting ambitions. Under that rubric also falls Lashkar-e-Taiba, an anti-India militant group. Like the others listed by Mr. Malik, Lashkar-e-Taiba has been banned by the state, but continues to operate under a different name and apparently with the blessing of the military.

The Punjabi Taliban took credit for the assaults on the two Ahmadi mosques last Friday. At least one of the men arrested by the Pakistani authorities in connection with the Times Square bombing case is connected to Jaish-e-Mohammed, according to law enforcement officials in Karachi.

Adding to the difficulty of clamping down on the groups, the Punjabi government, led by Shahbaz Sharif, a leader of the more conservative Pakistan Muslim League-N and a chief political rival of President Asif Ali Zardari, has stopped short of condemning the militants. In some respects, he has treated them as allies.

Two months ago, Mr. Sharif asked the Taliban to stay away from Punjab, arguing that his party and the Taliban had a common enemy in the United States. The Punjab government is “in a state of denial,” said Arif Nizami, a columnist with the newspaper The News. Mr. Sharif played down the attack on the two mosques in Lahore, Punjab’s capital. Instead, he visited the wounded survivors in a hospital quietly at night without the usual television coverage.

The groups hold such sway that Pakistani politicians frequently pander to some, like the pro-Taliban Sipah-e-Sohaba Pakistan, during elections.

In a bold illustration of the power of one of the militant groups in southern Punjab, the provincial law minister, Rana Sanaullah, campaigned alongside the leader of Sipah-e-Sohaba, Maulana Muhammad Ahmed Ludhianvi, during a March by-election for the provincial assembly in the city of Jhang.

In an interview, Mr. Sanaullah, said he saw nothing wrong with campaigning with Mr. Ludhianvi. It was a good thing, he said, because it helped bring groups that he described as no longer militant into the democratic mainstream. “If they want to be law-abiding citizens, we should allow them to be,” Mr. Sanaullah said.

Mr. Sanaullah was not alone in seeking votes from Sipah-e-Sohaba. A candidate for the National Assembly running for the Pakistan Peoples Party also won with its support earlier this year.

Though security is a paramount concern, government officials and others acknowledge that the problem of militancy will not be solved by military force alone. Having been nurtured through generations, it will also not be undone quickly.

A program announced by Mr. Zardari two years ago to rein in the madrasas has yet to get off the ground, blocked by bureaucratic inertia and fears of a backlash from powerful conservative religious groups, Pakistani officials say. As state-sponsored education becomes too expensive for poor parents, the number of madrasas has actually increased in the past three years, to more than 17,000 in 2010 from 13,000 in 2007. At least several thousand of the madrasas churn out militant students, experts say.

Official Admits Militancy?s Deep Roots in Pakistan - NYTimes.com
 
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It is a sad state of affairs in Pakistan. Pakistan has suffered the most and sometimes clearly the most even in comparison to Afghanistan. This underlines the seriousness of the situation and at this critical juncture, Pakistan is at the cross roads and has to set the records straight, clean the slate and set the tone for the future. A clean policy will be zero tolerance to any form of militancy to achieve state policy that uses organised or unorganised violent means. This motive if clearly demonstrated with action will make other countries follow by example.
:cheers:
 
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ASIA PACIFIC
Date Posted: 04-Jun-2010


Jane's Defence Weekly

Lahore attacks fuel concern over widening threat in Punjab

Farhan Bokhari Correspondent - Islamabad

Taliban insurgents in the Afghan border region have made successful overtures to Islamic militant groups in Pakistan's Punjab province, posing a formidable new challenge to the army and paramilitary forces fighting the militants, a senior Pakistani security official has told Jane's .

Concerns over the capacity of Taliban militants mounted rapidly after they attacked two centres used by members of the 'Ahmadiyya' community in the central city of Lahore on 28 May.

The day marked the 12th anniversary of Pakistan's maiden nuclear tests of 1998 and should have been an occasion for celebration. Instead, it came to symbolise Pakistan's vulnerability against an elusive enemy that relies on guerrilla-like tactics.

At least 92 people were killed and more than 120 injured in the two attacks.

Members of the 'Ahmadiyya' community claim to be Muslims but were officially declared as heretics by the government of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto in the mid-1970s.

Following the attacks, Pakistan's police commandos arrested two of the 16 militants believed to have taken part. Based on subsequent interrogation of one of the two suspects, Pakistani intelligence officials said that the group of assailants spent at least two weeks before the attack near Lahore with militants from Punjab-based Islamic hardline groups.

"The attackers took refuge with members of an Islamic militant group in the Punjab, who provided them with information on different aspects of the attack and also helped with logistics," one Pakistani intelligence officer, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Jane's . "A wider network of these militants, reaching deep inside the Punjab obviously has implications for us. This means that the militants are spreading themselves beyond just the border region," he added.

A Western defence official from a NATO member country speaking to Jane's , also on condition of anonymity, agreed that any evidence of the militants making bigger forays into the Punjab "must be seen as a significantly widening threat".

More than 60 per cent of Pakistan's population is based in the Punjab, which is home to the country's fastest growing towns and cities. "Unlike launching attacks on the militant groups in the border region where they operate from enclaves along the Afghan border, the fight in the Punjab will take the forces into many congested areas. This means the danger of more engagements in or near urban centres and more innocent casualties," said the NATO official.

However, the Pakistani intelligence official said that concerns over the spotlight falling on the Punjab must not take the focus away from militant activity in areas along the Afghan border. "It is important to keep our focus on all fronts. This is absolutely vital not to forget any area of militant activity," he concluded.
 
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All ends...poverty and unemployment. And blame goes to corrupt govt.
 
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