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In Pakistan, a Pashtun Cry for Equality and Justice

The country’s powerful military is trying to crush a nonviolent movement for civil rights.

By Manzoor Ahmad Pashteen

Mr. Pashteen is leading the movement for civil rights for the Pashtun minority in Pakistan.

    • When I was in high school, we moved to Dera Ismail Khan, a city around 100 miles away. Ours was yet another family among six million people who have been displaced from the region since Pakistan joined the war on terror in 2001. Tens of thousands of Pashtuns have been killed in terror attacks and military operations since.

      But our economic and political rights, and our suffering has remained invisible to most of Pakistan and the world because the region was seen as a dangerous frontier after numerous militants moved there after the fall of the Taliban.

      suspicion and hostility. We were stereotyped as terrorist sympathizers. I was studying to become a veterinarian, but the plight of my people forced me and several friends to become activists.




      In January 2018 Naqeebullah Mehsud, an aspiring model and businessman from Waziristan who was working in Karachi was killed by a police team led by a notorious officer named Rao Anwar. Mr. Anwar, who is accused of more than 400 extrajudicial murders, was granted bail and roams free.

      Along with 20 friends, I set out on a protest march from Dera Ismail Khan to Islamabad, the capital. Word spread, and by the time we reached Islamabad, several thousand people had joined the protest. We called our movement the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement, or the Pashtun Protection Movement.

      Ours is a peaceful movement that seeks security and political rights for Pashtuns. Apart from justice for Mr. Mehsud, we demand investigations into the killings of thousands of other Pashtuns by security forces and militants. We seek an end to enforced disappearances.


      As loyal, taxpaying citizens, we demand that Pakistani security forces act as our protectors and stop the harassment of Pashtuns at checkpoints and during raids. We demand that Islamabad cleanse Waziristan of land mines and other unexploded ordinances.

      We had several meetings with the military leadership. Some generals publicly acknowledged our grievances but they never moved to address our concerns. We held numerous sit-ins and protests and continued to hope that Pakistan’s leaders would try to address our concerns. Instead, they responded with intimidation and violence.

      After every major protest, police arrests and charges P.T.M. activists and supporters with rioting, treason or terrorism. Some of our activists are still being incarcerated under a colonial-era discriminatory law, which is no longer on the books.

      When we soldiered on, they unleashed the Taliban. In July, four P.T.M. protesters were killed and dozens injured after Taliban fighters fired at them. A military spokesman declared these Taliban fighters to be members of a peace committee and praised them for fighting terrorism and doing their part for “stabilization.”

      More recently, on Feb. 2, Arman Luni, a leader of our movement, who taught at a college, died after he was beaten up by the police for protesting against a terrorist attack in Balochistan province. My fellow activists and I were barred from joining his funeral. We participated anyway but were forced to leave the province after midnight. As we were driving out, the security forces fired at our car.

      Our demands and actions are underwritten by the Constitution of our country but the military is trying to portray us as traitors and enemy agents.

      While vile propaganda against our movement is reported as news, the security establishment has ensured that almost nothing is reported about our movement in the mainstream Pakistani newspapers and television networks.

      hybrid war.” Almost every day they accuse us of conspiring with Indian, Afghan or American intelligence services. Most of our activists, especially women, face relentless online harassment. A social media post expressing support for our campaign leads to a knock from the intelligence services.

      Scores of our supporters have been fired from their jobs. Many activists are held under terrorism laws. Alamzaib Khan Mehsud, an activist who was gathering data and advocating on behalf of victims of land mines and enforced disappearances, was arrested in January. Hayat Preghal, another activist, was imprisoned for months for expressing support from our movement on social media. He was released in October but barred from leaving the country and lost his pharmacist job in Dubai, his sole source of income.

      Gulalai Ismail, a celebrated activist, has been barred from leaving Pakistan. On Feb. 5, while protesting against the death of Mr. Luni, the college teacher and P.T.M. leader, she was detained and held incommunicado in an unknown place for 30 hours before being released. Seventeen other activists are still being detained in Islamabad.

      Imran Khan, who once boasted of his Pashtun origins, took office as the new prime minister of Pakistan in August, but his government has chosen to do little to change the state’s attitude toward our demands for justice and civil rights.

      The military is keen to ensure absolute control. We are not seeking a violent revolution, but we are determined to push Pakistan back toward a constitutional order. We are drawing some consolation from the recent judgment by Pakistan’s Supreme Court telling the military and the intelligence agencies to stay out of politics and media.

      To heal and reform our country, we seek a truth and reconciliation commission to evaluate, investigate and address our grievances. Since our movement emerged, public opinion in Pakistan has turned against extrajudicial killings. Most major political parties maintain that enforced disappearances have no place in the country.

      The legal and structural changes will take time, but breaking the silence and reducing the fear sustained for decades by the security apparatus is a measure of our success, even if the P.T.M.’s leaders are imprisoned or eliminated.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/11/opinion/pashtun-protests-pakistan.html
 
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As a pushtun Mera khoon kholta hai PTM ka naam sun ker.

The impotence of the establishment and it's strategy to stretch the issue as long as possible like swat issue prior to getting its shit together is a cause of concern.

These pseudo liberal fake marxists living on capitalist handouts should have been nipped in the bud and made part of the missing list.

We know that the army when needed can liquidate these terrorists without needing any warrent/court order.

I know that for a fact because two mullahs from my village were liquidated like that back in 09 with many others.

What is army/security establishment waiting for? May be it is time that pushtuns create something like grey wolves to deal with them.
 
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Must watch video from posted link

Man, who revealed PTM’s Khaisor propaganda, killed

PESHAWAR: Malik Matorkay, maternal uncle of Shariatullah – who abducted a Mari Petroleum Company Ltd employee, was shot dead on Sunday in Khaisor village in the Mirali tehsil of North Waziristan.

Matorkay had given the statement that security forces personnel had not harassed the family members of Shariatullah as was being portrayed by the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement (PTM) as he was present at the time of the raid.

Sources said that he had signed an affidavit as a guarantor that no wrongdoings were committed. PTM had targeted him on social media.

Background

Matorkay was the uncle of Hayat Khan – the 13-year-old boy who was persuaded by PTM activist Noorul Islam Dawar to give a video message against security forces for adopting unfair means in their search for his elder brother Shariatullah.

In an interview with Voice of America, Jalat Khan, father of Shariatullah, confirmed that his son was a terrorist.

Khaisor incident: The untold story

Shariatullah is said to have abducted and burnt four MPCL employees and a Frontier Corps soldier on October 23, 2018.

Another employee, Zahid Mehmood, was taken hostage and kept by Shariatullah at his house in Khaisor with the help of his father Jalat and brother Irfan.

When security forces went to rescue Mehmood, Shariatullah managed to escape into the mountains with the abductee.

Hayat was persuaded to give a video statement against the security forces.

However, Matorkay denied any such incident, saying he was with security forces when they searched the house of his sister. Hayat’s mother and Matorkay’s sister inked an affidavit stating no such thing happened.

 
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Hopefully now this drama will b ended for good....

What our higher ups dint understand is that pakhtoons are proud warrior people and rheir in action is taken as collusion and incompetence
 
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As a pushtun Mera khoon kholta hai PTM ka naam sun ker.

The impotence of the establishment and it's strategy to stretch the issue as long as possible like swat issue prior to getting its shit together is a cause of concern.

These pseudo liberal fake marxists living on capitalist handouts should have been nipped in the bud and made part of the missing list.

We know that the army when needed can liquidate these terrorists without needing any warrent/court order.

I know that for a fact because two mullahs from my village were liquidated like that back in 09 with many others.

What is army/security establishment waiting for? May be it is time that pushtuns create something like grey wolves to deal with them.

Security forces AND the PTI govt are too scared and/or clueless as to how to put an end to this clown show.

Your prescriptions are correct but we'll just have to wait for the majority pashtuns (who are conservative and anti-communist) to deal with them as these communists and secularists were dealt with over in Afghanistan.
 
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KP govt forms advisory committee to hold dialogue with PTM, other groups
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The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government on Tuesday announced the formation of an advisory committee which will address all social, political, administrative, and development issues faced by the tribal areas of the province. It has also been tasked with holding talks with all aggrieved groups in the region including the Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement (PTM).

"We are ready to hold talks with them. The government is ready to accept all justifiable demands put forth by the PTM," KP government spokesperson Ajmal Wazir said at a news conference in Peshawar.

"We are trying to resolve all issues through dialogue," he added.

PTM is a rights-based alliance that, besides calling for the de-mining of the former tribal areas and greater freedom of movement in the latter, has insisted on an end to the practices of extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances and unlawful detentions, and for their practitioners to be held to account within a truth and reconciliation framework.

Ajmal said the advisory committee headed by KP Chief Minister Mahmood Khan will be responsible for holding interactions with the PTM and relay their concerns to the provincial assembly which will then see how to resolve them.

He said the "beautiful thing" about the committee was that it did not only comprise MNAs and senators of the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) but also those from Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F), PPP, and PML-N.

Prior to the press conference, a meeting was held at Governor House between KP Governor Shah Farman, Chief Minister Khan and National Assembly members and senators belonging to the tribal areas to discuss matters pertaining to the recent KP-Fata merger along with all other issues the region is faced with.

However, no representatives from the PTM were present during the deliberations.

The formation of the committee was mutually agreed upon and it was named the 'advisory committee for redressals and development'.

It was decided that the body would be headed by the chief minister and will include senators and MNAs from the tribal districts along with representatives from various political parties.

'Temporary point-scoring'
When asked for a comment on the formation of the committee, independent MNA from South Waziristan and PTM leader Muhammad Ali Wazir told DawnNewsTV that PTM's demands are "not limited to the tribal areas. The movement now speaks for the entire region."

"When PTM speaks for the entire region, then how can this committee resolve our issues?" he questioned.

"This committee has simply been formed for temporary point-scoring," he alleged.

The PTM leader claimed that the government had acted in haste to merge Fata with KP and is now facing difficulties.

"The PTI government came into power for the first time and the governor is completely unaware of most of the issues faced by the tribal areas," he said, adding that the provincial government is flawed as well.

Wazir said he had not been invited to today's meeting.


Source:https://www.dawn.com/news/1463409
 
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What is army/security establishment waiting for? May be it is time that pushtuns create something like grey wolves to deal with them.
One thing the people of KP could do is to vote against PTM linked candidates in the next elections. The elections of Dawar and Wazir from FATA has given them a degree of legitimacy and media spotlight they didn't have. Look at the recent Reuters piece for example, they took the election of just 2 PTM members from FATA and used it to argue that 'the PTM had widespread support among Pashtun across Pakistan'.
 
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One thing the people of KP could do is to vote against PTM linked candidates in the next elections. The elections of Dawar and Wazir from FATA has given them a degree of legitimacy and media spotlight they didn't have. Look at the recent Reuters piece for example, they took the election of just 2 PTM members from FATA and used it to argue that 'the PTM had widespread support among Pashtun across Pakistan'.

Is Pakistan prepared if there are more than two PTM-linked candidates win in the next elections?
 
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One thing the people of KP could do is to vote against PTM linked candidates in the next elections. The elections of Dawar and Wazir from FATA has given them a degree of legitimacy and media spotlight they didn't have. Look at the recent Reuters piece for example, they took the election of just 2 PTM members from FATA and used it to argue that 'the PTM had widespread support among Pashtun across Pakistan'.

That's 4.5 years from now. Plenty of time for stuff to go sideways like what started to happen in 2007/8 in ex-FATA due to lack of foresight in 2004-2007. Do we need to go through another cycle like that.

We don't have years. Every war has an economic cost in terms of less GDP growth. Another cycle like above and there will be a huge gap in per capita GDP between us and our enemy. We already can't purchase major items for conventional parity. Any further gap will further reduce the nuclear threshold. This coupled with the exponential increase in population in next few years and lower resources will be the perfect recipe for a doomsday scenario.

The establishment needs to settle this now not when things will be out of hand.

People of KPK have always been more sensible relative to other provinces when it comes to voting as evident from previous elections.

However, it is time to take the Chinese/Russian route. Individual freedom can be sacrificed for overall betterment of the country's population.

Security forces AND the PTI govt are too scared and/or clueless as to how to put an end to this clown show.

Your prescriptions are correct but we'll just have to wait for the majority pashtuns (who are conservative and anti-communist) to deal with them as these communists and secularists were dealt with over in Afghanistan.

Well in absence of the state, the people will have to take action.
 
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Are we Ok with the name calling now?
Not at all - I was merely asking if Kaliya meant the same thing in Pashtu as it did in Urdu/Punjabi. If yes, then it's a racial slur and all of Wazir's posts using said slur should be reported to twitter.
 
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