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Will "go down fighting" if the Taliban attack our schools

we can make Army training necessary in All schools .. there must be two Entry and Exit gates in every school just in case of any Emergency ... and police stations must make sure they send patrol on every school once a day in their Areas ...
Dont u think it time to re initiate NCC(National Cadet Course) in colleges and universities all across Pakistan.Why did the govt stop this program???Its need of the hour
 
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Dont u think it time to re initiate NCC(National Cadet Course) in colleges and universities all across Pakistan.Why did the govt stop this program???Its need of the hour

yeah it is a good step , they should give basic training to college boys ... and must have some 2 exits in every school ... just in case ... kids are for studies not for fighting ... but training is for self defense ..
 
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this is good step....btw what pistol is the first man carying....32 bore or any other??
 
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He was hired to give children a good education and make them better citizens. He is neither a trained guard nor he was hired to do so. It is government's responsibility to provide security to the schools in KPK which became imperative in the wake of Peshawar school attack. Is there anything the kleptocratic oligarchy can do for the people of this country? Where is the Robespierre of Pakistan?

Going down fighting means exactly that. Whats expected and whats being provided is clear. No one wants to carry weapons to work.
 
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KPK govt has started giving weapons training to female teachers in Peshawar in first phase.

Teachers Receiving Gun Training in Peshawar


A very solid move.

Female teachers being given weapons training in Peshawar



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PESHAWAR (Web Desk) – A month after terrorist attack on a military-run school in Peshawar, authorities have commenced special gun training sessions for female teachers in the city, Dunya News reported on Tuesday.

Initially, eight teachers of Frontier College were given firearms training at Peshawar Police Line. The basic training emphasised how teachers should use the gun, as well as taking cover, before trying to shoot.

The theory is that if attackers target a school, they will face an armed response rather than classrooms full of defenceless staff and children.

Some teachers have expressed confidence and said that weapons training will help them protect their students.

The decision to train teachers was announced by the Inspector General of Kyber Pakhtunkhwa after the provincial government permitted them to keep weapons at the educational institutes.

Security of schools has been beefed up after December 16 attack on Army Public School, that claimed lives of nearly 150 people, most of them children. Elevated boundary walls with steel wire fencing have also been put in place in schools across the country.
 
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It is disturbing and scary that schoolteachers are now expected to carry guns, and that schools have snipers. But then that is the whole point of terrorist attacks - to make the population feel scared and vulnerable. Regretfully, I have to say that the TTP terrorists succeeded in that.

its not about fear its about self defence, and talibans succeed because politicians like imran and nawaz are in defense mode against talibans?
 
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its not about fear its about self defence, and talibans succeed because politicians like imran and nawaz are in defense mode against talibans?
It's both. It is due to fear that they are having to take drastic measures for self defence. And who can blame them for being scared, if there are deranged terrorists on the loose? I was saying that it is scary that those terrorists have managed to take the country to such a point, where even schoolteachers have to carry arms.

BTW, the taliban existed before Imran Khan became politically important, and at a time when Nawaz was not on the political scene either. It is too simplistic to blame it all on politicians.
 
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BTW, the taliban existed before Imran Khan became politically important, and at a time when Nawaz was not on the political scene either. It is too simplistic to blame it all on politicians.

why not? imran and nawaz are the ones nurturing taliban mindset now instead of fighting it?

if pakistanis feared thy wont have gone to schools and colleges and universities in the first place, its not about fear but its self defense
 
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Mohammed Iqbal says he will "go down fighting" if the Taliban attack his school :pakistan::sniper:
Following last month's Taliban school massacre, Pakistan is allowing teachers to carry weapons. The BBC's Shahzeb Jillani visits a school in Peshawar where staff are now serving as armed guards.

On a cloudy morning in January, Mohammed Iqbal is conducting a rare physical fitness class inside the courtyard of Government Higher Secondary School Number 1. The sprawling campus of the all-boys school is one of the biggest and oldest government institutions in Peshawar.

The school has a large playground for sports activities. But it's not been much in use since the Taliban massacre at the nearby Army Public School, which killed about 150 people, mostly children.

Until that atrocity, Mr Iqbal's main job was to plan sports activities for his pupils. He now doubles as the school's chief security officer, with a gun tucked under his long shirt.

"It's my personal gun which I have started carrying with me to school," he says as he pulls out a 9mm Beretta pistol.

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Government Higher Secondary School Number 1 is now protected by substantial firepower

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Some of the school's staff have been redeployed to guard its entrance

The school has recently acquired weapons and armed some of its staff. One of them now serves as a sniper on the rooftop. Others have been redeployed to guard the school entrance.

"A number of teachers were killed in the Army School attack. I want to make sure that if that ever happens here, we go down fighting," he says.

Does he find it hard to carry a gun as a teacher?

"We want to deliver knowledge, not weaponise our young people. But circumstances have compelled us to do this for our own safety," he says.

That's because the management accepts that police simply cannot protect tens of thousands of schools across the province. And unlike the elite private establishments, government-run schools lack funds to hire armed security guards. They often have no option but to make their own security arrangements.

'Security is not our job'
The 16 December school massacre sent shockwaves through the country and beyond. Schools across Pakistan were subsequently closed. When they reopened after an extended winter break of nearly a month, anxious parents debated whether or not to send their children back.

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The plan has sparked intense debate around Pakistan about how children can be protected
The authorities called for a series of new measures to enhance security. These included: raising boundary walls, topping them with barbed wire, installing CCTV cameras and setting up security gates.

More controversially, the government said it would allow teachers to carry weapons by issuing arms licences.

"The idea is to enable them to engage the attackers until help arrives," provincial information minister Mushtaq Ghani said at the time.

Since then, criticism of the proposal has grown.
"Our job is teaching, not carrying a gun," says Malik Khalid Khan, a head teacher and president of the teachers' union in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. "We are not prepared to become security guards."

Paradigm shift?
Last week, the provincial government was forced to backpedal on some of its earlier announcements.

"We are not ordering teachers to carry arms," Atif Khan, provincial education minister, told the BBC. "What we have discussed is that the government would allow licensed guns if teachers and parents asked for it."

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About 150 people were killed in the attack and many more injured
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Parents of the killed children hold regular memorials and protests
Officials point out that having a gun or carrying it is not a big deal in north-west Pakistan as it is considered a part of Pashtun tribal culture. Others believe promoting a gun culture in schools is not the way to fight violence and militancy.

For that to happen, many in Pakistan believe the powerful military will have to take on Islamist militants of all shades - whether they are Taliban targeting Pakistanis or jihadists focused on India and Afghanistan.

But that requires a massive paradigm shift in Pakistan's national security perceptions. Some believe that after the Peshawar school massacre, that belated change in thinking is already happening. Others well versed in Pakistan's complicated military-militant nexus are still not so sure.

BBC News - Peshawar massacre: Pakistan replies with 'weaponised' teaching
This is nothing to be surprised of, we are actually in the state of war where our enemy is not even sparing our kids. So such measures are expected.
This scenario is just like the 1965 war where our public took up arms to fight the enemy.
 
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