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Pakistan Army Linked to Militant Killings in Swat?

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Pakistan Army Is Said to Be Linked to Many Killings in Swat

By JANE PERLEZ and PIR ZUBAIR SHAH

Published: September 14, 2009

MINGORA, Pakistan — Two months after the Pakistani Army wrested control of the Swat Valley from Taliban militants, a new campaign of fear has taken hold, with scores, perhaps hundreds, of bodies dumped on the streets in what human rights advocates and local residents say is the work of the military.

Pakistan’s army wrested control of Swat from the Taliban.
In some cases, people may simply have been seeking revenge against the ruthless Taliban, in a society that tends to accept tit-for-tat reprisals, local politicians said.


But the scale of the retaliation, the similarities in the way that many of the victims have been tortured and the systematic nature of the deaths and disappearances in areas that the military firmly controls have led local residents, human rights workers and some Pakistani officials to conclude that the military has had a role in the campaign.

The Pakistani Army, which is supported by the United States and in the absence of effective political leadership is running much of Swat with an iron hand, has strenuously denied any involvement in the killings. The army has acknowledged that bodies have turned up, but its spokesmen assert that the killings are the result of civilians settling scores.

“There are no extrajudicial killings in our system,” said Col. Akhtar Abbas, the army spokesman in Swat. “If something happens, we have a foolproof accountability system.”

But neighbors of the victims and Swat residents say there is something more going on than revenge killings by civilians.

A senior politician from the region and a former interior minister, Aftab Ahmed Sherpao, said he was worried about the army’s involvement in the killings. “There have been reports of extrajudicial killings by the military that are of concern,” he said. “This will not help bring peace.”

Pakistan’s military operations against the Taliban in Swat, begun in May under public pressure from the United States, has been hailed by Washington as a showcase effort of the army’s newfound resolve to defeat the militants. The American ambassador, Anne W. Patterson, visited Mingora, the biggest town in Swat, last week, becoming the first senior American official to go to Swat since the army took over.

Now, concerns over the army’s methods in the area threaten to further taint Washington’s association with the military, cooperation that has been questioned in Congress and has been politically unpopular in Pakistan.

The number of killings suggests that the military is seeking to silence any enthusiasm for the Taliban and to settle accounts for heavy army casualties, said a senior provincial official who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprimand by the army.

A sullen, uncertain atmosphere prevails in Mingora, where people interviewed last week in shops, homes and government institutions nervously complained of the arbitrary and unpredictable army rule.

Bodies, some with torture marks and some with limbs tied and a bullet in the neck or head, have been found on the roads of Mingora and in rural areas that were militant strongholds.

Reports on Sept. 1 in two national daily newspapers, Dawn and The News, said the bodies of 251 people had been found dumped in Swat.

The Human Rights Commission, a nongovernmental organization, disputed that all the victims had been killed by civilians, saying last month that there were credible reports of retaliatory killings by the military. It said that witnesses had seen mass graves and that in some cases, the bodies appeared to be those of militants.

The exact number of alleged killings was impossible to calculate because the presence of human rights monitors was limited by the authorities, the commission said. The International Committee of the Red Cross, which investigates illegal killings, was ordered by the military to leave Swat last month over matters unrelated to the killings, a senior Pakistani government official and the Red Cross said.

In one case, a family filed a petition with the army command last week describing the alleged killing of their son while in military custody. The army has initiated an inquiry, Colonel Abbas, the military spokesman in Swat, said.

The family of the man, Akhtar Ali, 28, said he was arrested at his electrical shop in Mingora in the early evening of Sept. 1 by a group of soldiers. Four days later, Mr. Ali’s body was returned to the family home “tortured to death,” a petition signed by his mother, Jehan Sultana, said.

Colonel Abbas said the army did not acknowledge that Akhtar Ali had been in military custody. If the inquiry found that a member of the army was guilty of the death, he would be disciplined, he said, “whatever the rank.”

According to the family’s account, family members went to army headquarters in Mingora the day after his arrest. “We were assured he would be released,” the petition said. A day or two later they were told he would be home the next day.

Instead, at 6 a.m. on Sept. 5, security forces dropped his body on the doorstep, the statement said. “There was no place on his body not tortured,” the petition said. Nails were “hammered into his body, and cigarettes burned into the skin.”

The petition said Mr. Ali had no relationship with the Taliban.

In another alleged retaliatory killing, a man in his mid-20s, also called Akhtar Ali, was arrested in Mingora on July 22, shortly after the army declared the city safe.

His father, Aziz Ullah, said Mr. Ali had been taken away by soldiers near the family home. The next morning, Mr. Ali’s body was found on the street not far from where he had been picked up, Mr. Ullah said.

“He had spoken in the mosque in favor of the Taliban, but he never picked up a gun,” he said.

The Human Rights Commission report said residents also described mass graves in Kukarai village and in an area between the villages of Daulai and Shah Dheri. Witnesses said some of the bodies in the graves appeared to be those of Taliban militants, the report said. The army has rejected any suggestion that soldiers were involved.

The chief spokesman for the military, Gen. Athar Abbas, said the graves were the result of the Taliban killing their wounded as they retreated and dumping the bodies. The military was dealing with arrested militants through the courts and was seeking changes in the law of evidence to ensure more convictions, General Abbas said.

About 250 to 300 people told the commission of suspected retaliatory killings, a commission official said. In some cases, five people told the group about the same single episode, he said.

A well-to-do landlord, Sher Shah Khan, who had criticized what he termed the army’s early reluctance to confront the militants, said he was not worried about the reports. “If the security services kill in the same manner as the Taliban killed, people have no problem.”

But the principal of a girls’ school, Ziauddin Yousafzi, said the military was making examples of the wrong people.

“The state cannot be barbaric,” he said. “If people see the bodies of the top leaders of the Taliban rather than the body of people like Akhtar Ali, they will be jubilant.”

The Fog of War! - who is right and who is wrong?
 
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Witness to violence in Swat valley
BBC NEWS | South Asia | Witness to violence in Swat valley

Eyewitness accounts of violence during Pakistan's anti-Taliban offensive...BBC Urdu's Abdul Hai Kakar...Javed Iqbal from Hajiabad describes.....army told us to move ahead of them as they turned back from their mission. We were just marching back to the vehicles when the Taliban attacked with rockets...
My 70-year-old father, Munir Khan, my elderly mother, Bibi, and my two teenage sisters, Saira and Shazia remained behind in our home.
was told by my neighbours that it happened on 3 July...security forces personnel came to the village and went into my home. ...set the house on fire and moments later gunfire was heard from inside the house....My neighbours said they later learned that all my family had been killed.

The bodies lay inside the burned courtyard for two days, after which neighbours quietly went in and buried them there.
BBC later spoke to the local army public relations official. He said the entire episode was made up of baseless accusations. He added that after the incident became public knowledge, the army investigated the events.

The official said that it was discovered that the forces had not raided the home of any civilian on 3 July, nor killed any of his family members. He further said that on the days mentioned the army was indeed searching for the Taliban Commander Mohammad Qasab and had launched an operation in the area.

But, he reiterated, it was not the policy of the army to target civilians, indeed they could not even think of doing such a thing. The spokesman said the army needed the civilian help in its campaign against the Taliban, and it could not do anything to jeopardise this.
 
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So what all this campaign is all about? Why to quote some anonymous witnesses? where are proves and even if Army killed Taliban with cruelty that is what these terrorists deserved.
 
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Pakistan Army Is Said to Be Linked to Many Killings in Swat ................compared to the tolerance, peace, stability and calmness displayed by the Taliban before?? When you get rid of smelly garbage from your house, you are bound to get your hands dirty and clothes stained!
 
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lets not forget what these animals eg fazallullah and baitullah have been doing.
we forget too quickly.
well done Pak Forces Jawans
 
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This is BS. For the armed forces it is a very difficult situation.

All the NGO types dissapear when the Terrorists kill people and if something happens by the Army then they are out on full force condemning the Army. they are the easiest targets for these Human rights champions.

OTOH it is precisely the discipline and the adherence to the law of the land that differentiates between the good guys and the Terrorists.

The security agencies need the full support of the Govt and the people but they should also remember that if they repeatedly cross the line then how would you differentiate between the Good Guys and the Bad guys.

This is indeed a tough time for the Security forces but as they say WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH THE TOUGH GET GOING.
 
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unfortunatly i 've heard it from my friends as well. some of my friends were convinced this is all a game plan by zardari in order to attract more aid from usa 'nd victims 've become the civilians of swat. they all got families 'nd relatives in swat 'nd my friends act very strangely since taliban came to pakistan. i keep reassuring them all 'll be fine 'nd army is there to help 'nd now lets pray our army indeed is our saviour becuz thats what i believe myself
 
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How of many of us try to understand armed forces position in such situations. They are the ones thrown in a hostile area where bullets are flying. It is easy to say not to kill innocent people from AC rooms. They get very little time to react and at times they have to take the hard decisions. No one likes to kill people for fun.
 
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Swat is bloody cleared damned. I just talked to my aunt last night on the phone she said that all the war is over. The people love the army there, if the army was involved in killing Taliban then I say its justified. Anyone here who wants to be against me should have visited Swat before the operation.
An Eye for an Eye!
 
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Swat is bloody cleared damned. I just talked to my aunt last night on the phone she said that all the war is over. The people love the army there, if the army was involved in killing Taliban then I say its justified. Anyone here who wants to be against me should have visited Swat before the operation.
An Eye for an Eye!
those civilians 're nadaan 'nd dont know houses get bombed 'nd ppl get killed in a war. they shudn't think pakistani army targeted swati's becuz they were there to help. cant blame anyone here
 
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the PA and the GoP have to make a strong statement and make their POV known. if they ignore this "charge" then the media (esp. the likes of NYT, WP, Geo etc) will continue to push their agenda and once again the PA will be seen as a "invader force" and the past (BD) may again be brought up. the mistake in BD was exactly that we "deported" all the journalists from the war-zone and there was no independent assessment of the ground realities - such has also happened in Swat - the PA and GoP need to be very careful here.
 
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MINGORA, 25 August 2009 (IRIN) - Human rights groups and local residents say mass graves have been found in parts of northwestern Pakistan which have seen fierce fighting between government forces and Taliban militants since May 2009.

The autonomous Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) has reported the discovery of mass graves in Babozai and Kabal sub-districts of Swat District, North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

"We have also documented credible accounts of numerous extra-judicial killings and reprisals carried out by security forces," Asma Jahangir, the HRCP chairperson, told IRIN.

Senior military spokesman Maj-Gen Athar Abbas denies the military were involved: "The militants buried their associates in mass graves" while retreating from areas of conflict. He also denied charges that militants were subjected to torture or summarily executed.

HRCP has demanded an independent inquiry into the alleged extra-judicial killings.

Sebastien Brack, a spokesman for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Pakistan, refused to be drawn into the argument, saying that the ICRC was focusing on meeting the needs of local people. "The infrastructure was destroyed by the fighting. It now needs to be re-built so people have access to health care and to livelihood, which is another key need."

Plausible?

In Mingora - the principal city of Swat which is beginning to return to normal as markets, offices and schools re-open and supply lines for goods gradually improve - accounts of atrocities during the conflict appear plausible to many.

"I have heard from a cousin in the Kabal area how he was present when a mass grave was found. We have also heard some people were shot on the streets by soldiers," Emaduddin Khan, a local shopkeeper, told IRIN.

Whether or not such testimonies - and others about militants being tied up and dragged behind vehicles or tortured in other ways - are accurate, they reflect the tension and nervousness lingering in Swat.

"These stories are told everywhere. They make me shudder," said Muhammad Amjad, 17. Like other boys and young men in Swat, he also faced pressure from the militants to join them.

Violations of humanitarian law?

Allegations of gross violations of humanitarian law have been widespread. In May, just a week after the fighting began, the New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) warned of violations of war law by the military.

"Beheadings and use of human shields by Taliban forces are not a blank cheque for the Pakistan Army," Brad Adams, Asia director of HRW, said in a statement at the time.

Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions of 1949 stipulate humane treatment for all persons in enemy hands; that the wounded and sick be collected and cared for; and that the ICRC be granted the right to offer its services to the parties to the conflict.

"No one, no doctors, no relief workers, no journalists were allowed here for months. My son was hit by a bullet, and we could not even get him to a doctor to have it removed from his leg for three days because of the curfew and the fighting," said local resident Younis Khan, 50.

The fighting displaced 2.3 million people, of whom 1.6 million have now returned home, over half of them to Swat District, the latest Pakistani government figures show.

UNHCR | Refworld | Pakistan: Mass graves found in Swat
 
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The argument made by the Army that the mass graves were dug by the militants is plausible - at the beginning of the latest operation the advancing forces reported coming across mass graves when advancing upon Taliban positions after air and artillery strikes had been called in.

In some cases the graves were so shallow that they were discovered because the area stank of decomposing bodies.

The Army has no need to dig graves for these people - they are still engaged in active combat with insurgents periodically and could merely pass the bodies off as the latest casualties in an encounter.
 
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After losing so many troops by putting them in harms way to avoid collateral damage, I think it would be stupid for the Army to go in and summarily execute people.

While the Army must hold its officers and men accountable, I feel that the other side is using these deaths as a propagands ploy. The fact is that this is "badl" in effect. When Taliban were in these areas, people knew who the taliban were as most of them were locals who got hired by the Taliban to do their bidding. Once the Taliban were beaten out, those families who suffered at the hands of these local Taliban thugs are going after them. This is something that many insiders in the area had predicted.

There should be no state patronage for badl, but the act of badl is bound to happen.
 
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