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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Friday allowed political parties to operate freely for the first time in its lawless tribal belt of Fata and amended harsh federal laws in a bid to lessen the grip of militancy in the region.
President Asif Ali Zardari signed the amendments by decree, with the government looking for ways to contain systemic violence in the semi-autonomous region that Washington has called the global headquarters of Al-Qaeda.
In the long run we must defeat the militant mindset to defend our country, our democracy, our institutions and our way of life, Zardari said, describing the system of justice in the tribal belt as obsolete.
The northwest region has long been governed by British colonial law.
It is a headquarters for Taliban and other Al-Qaeda-linked networks fighting against US troops in Afghanistan and behind a bombing campaign in Pakistan that has killed more than 4,500 people in four years.
Critics argue that the lack of reforms have alienated tribesmen and made it easier for militant networks to recruit young men to take up arms to fight the Pakistani government and to avenge a covert American drone war.
The Taliban bitterly oppose Islamabads alliance with the United States and American drone strikes, which leaked American diplomatic cables showed the government quietly approved.
Henceforth the political parties, subject to appropriate regulations to be framed, will be freely allowed to operate in the tribal areas and present their socio-economic programmes, said Zardaris spokesman Farhatullah Babar.
Under the reforms, an accused has to be produced before an authority within 24 hours of his arrest and has the right to bail. The practice of arresting tribesmen for collective responsibility will also be softened, said Babar.
The Pakistani military is fighting against homegrown militants in much of the tribal belt, but has ignored US pressure to open a new front against Afghan and Al-Qaeda-linked extremists in the district of North Waziristan.
Babar told AFP that allowing political parties to operate freely meant that a vacuum had been filled and that parties would now liaise with tribal elders in order to carry out their activities in a peaceful manner.
Until now lawmakers representing the tribal belt were technically independents. Although some have been backed by political parties, the parties themselves were not allowed to operate on the ground.
http://www.dawn.com/2011/08/12/president-zardari-allows-political-parties-in-fata.html
President Asif Ali Zardari signed the amendments by decree, with the government looking for ways to contain systemic violence in the semi-autonomous region that Washington has called the global headquarters of Al-Qaeda.
In the long run we must defeat the militant mindset to defend our country, our democracy, our institutions and our way of life, Zardari said, describing the system of justice in the tribal belt as obsolete.
The northwest region has long been governed by British colonial law.
It is a headquarters for Taliban and other Al-Qaeda-linked networks fighting against US troops in Afghanistan and behind a bombing campaign in Pakistan that has killed more than 4,500 people in four years.
Critics argue that the lack of reforms have alienated tribesmen and made it easier for militant networks to recruit young men to take up arms to fight the Pakistani government and to avenge a covert American drone war.
The Taliban bitterly oppose Islamabads alliance with the United States and American drone strikes, which leaked American diplomatic cables showed the government quietly approved.
Henceforth the political parties, subject to appropriate regulations to be framed, will be freely allowed to operate in the tribal areas and present their socio-economic programmes, said Zardaris spokesman Farhatullah Babar.
Under the reforms, an accused has to be produced before an authority within 24 hours of his arrest and has the right to bail. The practice of arresting tribesmen for collective responsibility will also be softened, said Babar.
The Pakistani military is fighting against homegrown militants in much of the tribal belt, but has ignored US pressure to open a new front against Afghan and Al-Qaeda-linked extremists in the district of North Waziristan.
Babar told AFP that allowing political parties to operate freely meant that a vacuum had been filled and that parties would now liaise with tribal elders in order to carry out their activities in a peaceful manner.
Until now lawmakers representing the tribal belt were technically independents. Although some have been backed by political parties, the parties themselves were not allowed to operate on the ground.
http://www.dawn.com/2011/08/12/president-zardari-allows-political-parties-in-fata.html