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Academic Development Program (ADP) IDSP-Pakistan
Academic Development Program,IDSP-Pakistan programing office/ House # 7-A Almashriq street Arbab Karam Khan Road Quetta/Phone #: 0092- 81-2449775,2471776 Fax #:0092-81-2447285

These articles are published by Academic Development Program of IDSP-Pakistan through using different sources.The opinions reflected by the various contributers and articles do not necessarily reflect the views of IDSP- Pakistan.

VIEW: Trudging on —Gulmina Bilal Ahmad

March 19, 2010

VIEW: Trudging on —Gulmina Bilal Ahmad

Courtesy to "Daily Times" 

It is imperative to understand that we need to win the war and not just the battle. While we rightly pat ourselves and the police, military and paramilitary forces for their work, we need to remind ourselves and them that the war is yet to be won

In the wake of the tragic
Lahore blasts, the discussion of the ethnicity of the Taliban and the success of the operations against them has received a new impetus. During the discussions, there are those who are identified as the Punjabi Taliban — who apparently also took responsibility for the chaos that reigned last week. Then there are some political analysts who believe that because of the successful military operations against the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in the NWFP and FATA, the TTP splinter cells have merely re-located to Southern Punjab and are operating from there. Hence, according to them, it is the same TTP but with a different street address! A third attempt at understanding the Lahore attacks is the old-radical-in-a-new-bottle theory. This theory, which was also put forth this week in an editorial of a leading English newspaper, postulates that Southern Punjab, which has been no stranger to radical and extremist elements such as Jaish-e-Mohammad and Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan, might be lending administrative support to the TTP. The TTP, they believe, is finding it increasingly difficult to operate in the face of the successful military operations and also more effective intelligence gathering and sharing mechanisms. The Punjab chief minister seems to be struggling to condemn the attack in a way so as to keep his province’s interests paramount but also not imply that he is excluding the rest of Pakistan. His son is quick to defend him and the political shenanigans go on.

All the above explanations are attempts at further understanding the terrorism challenge that we are confronted with and most importantly the perpetrators of this challenge. An attempt to understand this is important, for with understanding comes clarity. It is important that we understand the mechanisms and multiple facets of the Pakistani Taliban, which has created such havoc in our political, social, economic and personal lives. It is because of the Pakistani Taliban that Pakistan suffered more suicide blasts than Iraq, making it the suicide capital of the world.

There are some who get impatient with the discussions and attempts to understand the TTP. As a friend remarked, “We spend our time on TV talk shows trying to understand whether the Taliban are Punjabi or Pathan while they strategise and successfully execute their plans.” There are also some well-meaning critics who lament the lack of intelligence and question how the terrorists can strike amidst all the security.

However, it is important not to lose hope. As the whole country mourns with Lahore, we should not forget that these are desperate reactions of a fledging terrorist organisation that has had many of its key leaders killed. The TTP is an organisation on the run. Six out of the eight blasts that rocked Lahore were meant to generate panic amongst the people. This is exactly what we have to avoid. The TTP understands psychological warfare well. They employ psy-warfare techniques, be it showing brutal videos of mutilations or placing low-intensity bombs. We need to avoid this trap, as having a knee-jerk reaction is exactly what the TTP wants us to do.

The extremism network in Pakistan has suffered major losses. They do not admit it but they have. The drone attacks, locally referred to as ‘the mosquitoes’ because of the hum that they make, have been responsible for killing many of their top leaders. For instance, as reported in an Urdu weekly magazine, Hum Shehri, in the last two years, 14 of their key commanders have been killed by drone attacks. Each one of these 14 commanders was instrumental in carrying out and supervising deadly attacks, both within Pakistan and abroad. For instance, Abu Laith al-Libi, a noted al Qaeda member of Libyan origin and a military planner and specialist in guerrilla warfare, masterminded the Bagram Air Base attacks in 2007. He was killed in South Waziristan in January 2008. Usama al-Kini from Kenya along with his lieutenant Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan was killed in a drone attack in 2009. Usama was believed to be involved in the Islamabad Marriott attacks. The key leader of the TTP, Baitullah Mehsud, was killed in August 2009 in South Waziristan, creating a huge leadership crisis in the TTP. In North Waziristan, Mustafa al Jaziri, who was a member of the al Qaeda Shura along with the so-called Punjabi Taliban, was also killed, thus creating another leadership deficit.

An organisation is effective only through its leaders and the extent to which they have the space to operate within the network. By means of the systematic and strategic attacks on the organisation of the extremist elements in Pakistan that are organised into various groups/factions, the battle is slowly but surely being won. However, it is imperative to understand that we need to win the war and not just the battle. While we rightly pat ourselves and the police, military and paramilitary forces for their work, we need to remind ourselves and them that the war is yet to be won.

Lahore is a tragic reminder. A reminder that we need to step up our efforts as well as the resources available to us to fight these extremist forces. The news of the US transferring Cobra helicopters, which are equipped for night flying, to Pakistan is welcome. The success of the drone attacks has already shown that they are instrumental in taking out strategic targets like the leaders mentioned above. The recent fatwa by Tahir-ul-Qadri that systematically discredits each and every argument used by the extremist elements — whether they be al Qaeda or the TTP — shows how the religious leaders can play their due role in this war. However, there is a need to remain consistent in our fight and not get involved in squabbles over statements issued by political leaders, conspiracy theories or the “hidden hand” theory. The only “hidden hand” here is that of the extremists who seek to violate our peace. We need to continue our efforts to expose them and keep them on the run.

The writer is an Islamabad-based consultant. She can be reached at contact@individualland.com

 

Attitude towards girl child: By Dr Riffat Hassan

March 19, 2010
Attitude towards girl child: By Dr Riffat Hassan

Courtesy to “Dawn”

BEFORE the advent of Islam, many girl children in Arabia were denied the most fundamental right to live. As stated by Muhammad Asad, “The barbaric custom of burying female infants alive seems to have been fairly widespread in pre-Islamic Arabs.”

The Quran itself refers to this heinous practice in two specific passages. The first reference is in the context o...

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Taliban Increasingly Unpopular in Pakistan

March 18, 2010

Taliban Increasingly Unpopular in Pakistan

Four percent say Taliban's presence is positive influence

by Julie Ray and Rajesh Srinivasan: Courtesy to " GALLUP "

This article is the first of a two-part series that looks at Pakistanis' and Afghans' views of the Taliban's influence and their respective countries' efforts to combat terrorism.

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Taliban's presence on either side of the Afghanistan-Pakistan...


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Violence in the home

March 13, 2010
Violence in the home - by Zubeida Mustafa

Courtesy to “Dawn”

THE theme of International Women’s Day observed on Monday was ‘equal rights, equal opportunities and progress for all’. One may well ask if this ideal can ever be achieved as long as the unequal power relationship between the sexes, which causes women to become victims of domestic violence, continues to exist.

Unicef now recognises that when the home which is supposed to be the safes...

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VIEW: Rehabilitation of the Taliban

March 13, 2010

VIEW: Rehabilitation of the Taliban —Gulmina Bilal Ahmad

Courtesy to "Daily Times" 

Young children were kidnapped by the Taliban and then made to serve as suicide bombers. These young men, and in the latter part of the battle young women, became cannon fodder for the Taliban’s heinous designs. They did not have the freedom to choose their path

At least 13 people dead in the Lahore blast. On the day that marked the hundredth anniversary of the International Women’s Day, many wom...


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analysis: Kamal Mehsud: did the ISPR cheat him?

March 13, 2010

analysis: Kamal Mehsud: did the ISPR cheat him? —Farhat Taj

Courtesy to "Daily Times" 

Kamal Mehsud’s story is just one of the hundreds of stories of horror in Waziristan. The other stories are much more brutal and sinister in terms of the intelligence agencies’ collusion with the Taliban

Kamal Mehsud was the most famous singer of Waziristan. He died in January 2010 in a fire that broke out in his house when his family was away for a wedding ceremony. The family believes he has...


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VIEW: We do not learn from history —Wazhma Frogh

March 9, 2010

VIEW: We do not learn from history —Wazhma Frogh

Courtesy to "Daily Times" 

Women’s groups, Afghan civil society organisations and activists have regularly raised alarm because they are concerned that the cooption of the Taliban is likely to amount to a loss of the achievements made over the past nine years

Could we turn the clock back in Afghanistan and travel through time? If so, then the Bonn Agreement of 2001 would be the right time and place to present the Taliban reintegrat...


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I slam’s sources of knowledge by By Dr Riffat Hassan

March 8, 2010
I slam’s sources of knowledge By Dr Riffat Hassan

Courtesy to “Dawn”

SURAH 96, verses 1-5, the first revelation received by Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), links divine bounty to the human ability to read, write and to know.

The passage states, “Read in the name of your Sustainer, who has created — created man out of a germ-cell. Read — for your Sustainer is the Most Bountiful One, Who has taugh...

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BOOK REVIEW:Humanising the monster-by Dr Mohammad Taqi

March 6, 2010

BOOK REVIEW: Humanising the monster —by Dr Mohammad Taqi

My life with the Taliban, By Abdul Salam Zaeef

Courtesy to "Daily Times" 

Translated from Pashto and edited by Alex Strick van Linschoten and Felix Kuehn
Hurst/Columbia University Press; Pp 331


In his foreword to Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef’s book, Professor Barnett Rubin of New York University sets the stage for the launch, ostensibly, of a refreshingly authentic work of this inaccurate and revisionist take on contemporary Afghan...


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analysis: Interpreting tribal leaders of FATA —Farhat Taj

March 6, 2010

analysis: Interpreting tribal leaders of FATA —Farhat Taj

Courtesy to "Daily Times" 

Anger against the Pakistan Army and the Taliban is intense and getting more intense with every passing day and so is disappointment with the government of Pakistan

I am compiling a list of the
tribal leaders of FATA who have been victims of target killings from 2003 onwards. This is still a work in progress and my estimate is that the names in the final list would be well over 1,000. There is a wid...


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