Tribal Anger Mounts against Musharraf& Benazir -
International Terrorism Monitor--Paper No. 293 By B. Raman
1. The tribal anger against President General
Pervez Musharraf, which was already running high
after the Pakistan Army's commando raid into the
Lal Masjid in Islamabad from July 10 to 13,2007,
has further escalated in the wake of the air
strikes carried out by the Pakistan Air Force on
suspected terrorists in the Mir Ali area of
North Waziristan before the celebration of the
Id festivities. The Pakistan Army claimed to
have killed about 200 militants in the attacks
carried out by helicopter gunships and military
aircraft. It claimed that while 150 of them were
the local militants who had formed a local
version of the Taliban, 25 were Uzbeks and the
remaining 25 were Afghan Pashtuns, Tajiks and
Arabs.
2.Local tribal leaders have strongly refuted
these claims and asserted that all those killed
were innocent civilians, including many women
and children. The Army operations, which
followed the kidnapping of over 300 Army and
para-military personnel by the militants, led to
large-scale displacement of internal refugees
from North Waziristan to the adjoining areas of
the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP). Every
year, just before Id tribals from the FATA
working or studying in other parts of Pakistan
go on leave to their towns and villages for a
family reunion at the time of the Id
festivities. This year, there were no family
reunions and those living in the Mir Ali and
Miranshah areas of North Waziristan refrained
from celebrating Id in protest against the Army
action and the air strikes, which led to large
exodus of people and the cancellation of the
traditional family reunions.
3, The prayer meetings in the mosques of
North and South Waziristan saw strong statements
not only against Gen. Musharraf, but also against
Mrs. Benazir Bhutto for supporting the General
and the US. She was denounced as apostate
because of her alleged collusion with them.
4. In the meanwhile, taking advantage of the
resignation of the coalition Government of the
Islamic fundamentalist parties in the NWFP,
which has led to the formation of a caretaker
Government headed by an ex-bureaucrat, the
Pakistan Army has launched a special operation
in the Swat area, which was virtually under the
control of the Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat
Muhammadi (TNSM), which is headed by Mullah
Fazlullah, popularly known as Maulana FM Radio.
He makes broadcasts from an FM radio station
installed in his mosque at Imam Dheri, a village
in the Swat district. He is the son-in-law of
Mulla Sufi Mohammad, the previous head of the
TNSM, who is in the custody of the Pakistani
authorities since 2002, when the TNSM was banned
for supporting Al Qaeda and the Taliban.
5. Taking advantage of the preoccupation of
the Army in South and North Waziristan and with
the complicity of the previous Government of the
fundamentalist coalition in Peshawar, Fazlullah
raised his own force and assumed control of the
Swat valley and started imposing Islamic laws
and punishments on the local people.
6. Disregarding threats of retaliation by
him, the Musharraf Government has sent an
estimated 2,500 para-military troops into the
area to arrest him, neutralise his force and
re-establish the writ of the State. A vehicle
carrying para-military personnel into the area
for laying a siege on the hide-out of Fazlullah
at Imam Dheri was blown up on October 25, 2007,
at a place called Mingora, about 15 kms from
Imam Dheri, killing 20 members of the Frontier
Constabulary and some civilians. Fazlullah, who
has denied any responsibility for the explosion,
has reportedly fled from the area. There have
been clashes between his followers and the para-military
forces, which are still continuing.
The writer is Additional
Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of
India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director,
Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)