What's new

Demolished by the Pakistan army: the frontier village punished for harbouring the Tal

fatman17

PDF THINK TANK: CONSULTANT
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
32,563
Reaction score
98
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
guardian.co.uk home | guardian.co.uk

Demolished by the Pakistan army: the frontier village punished for harbouring the Taliban

· 200,000 flee after attack on militant stronghold
· Soldiers say schools for suicide bombers found

Declan Walsh in Spinkai, South Waziristan The Guardian, Tuesday May 20

Pakistani soldiers seen from a departing helicopter in Spinkai, a town that has been the scene of fierce fighting between the Pakistani army and Taliban militants. Photograph: Declan Walsh

A fading photo tossed on an empty bed is all that remains of the interrupted lives in Spinkai, a desolate Pakistani village that has endured the wrath of the army's "collective punishment".

In the image a laughing young man in a jet-black turban brandishes his rifle like a trophy. Beside him stand two little girls in bright frocks, giggling with glee. Now they have fled, and so has everyone else.

An estimated 200,000 villagers have been displaced since the Pakistani army attacked the mountain redoubt of Baitullah Mehsud, the leader of the Pakistani Taliban and a suspect in the assassination of Benazir Bhutto four months ago.

The operation was called zalzala - Urdu for earthquake. One of the first villages they hit was Spinkai, nestled under a line of jagged hills at the gateway to the Mehsud stronghold in South Waziristan.

The army swept through with helicopter gunships, artillery and tanks that crunched across a parched riverbed. After four days of heavy fighting - 25 militants and six soldiers died, the army said - the militants retreated up the valley.

In their wake, the soldiers said, they discovered bomb factories and schools for teenage suicide bombers. Waziristan is the hub of a surge in suicide attacks in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The local people had already fled to refugee camps in nearby North-West Frontier province. But army retaliation against them - for allowing the militants to operate - was swift and harsh.

Bulldozers and explosives experts turned Spinkai's bazaar into a mile-long pile of rubble. Petrol stations, shops, even parts of the hospital, were levelled or blown up.

Four months later the villagers are forbidden from returning home. Their wheat is ******* in the fields. But Pakistani commanders insist they have been merciful in their application of "collective punishment" - a practice invented by the British who demarcated the tribal areas over a century ago.

Walking through the bullet-pocked rubble, Brigadier Ali Abbas pointed to alleged bomb factories. His troops had recovered 12 detonation-ready suicide jackets, he said, and many others in preparation.

"As per the frontier crimes regulations I should have destroyed everyone's house, but I didn't. Call it my weakness. Call it kindness," he said with a wry laugh.

As a fresh round of peace negotiations with militants stumbles forward, the Pakistani army wants to show that it means business. On Sunday a small group of journalists were flown to the tribal belt, where officers denied suggestions that they were "going soft" on militants.

"This is a complete siege of the Mehsud area," said Major General Tariq Khan, one of three battlefield commanders.

But the militants are beaten back, not defeated. Khan admitted that his troops had withdrawn to fringe positions, such as Spinkai, leaving Mehsud and his men free to roam the centre.

The army is also reacting to intense American pressure. In recent months US officials have vocally re-aired their view that the tribal belt is a major Taliban rear base for attacks in Afghanistan, and a headquarters for al-Qaida's high command.

In March the CIA director, Michael Hayden, warned that the lawless area presented a "clear and present danger" to the west, and was the likely source of any future attack on America. On Sunday the new prime minister, Yousaf Raza Gilani, met President George Bush on the fringes of a conference in Egypt to discuss the situation.

The US is bankrolling the operations in North and South Waziristan, giving at least $5.5bn (about £2.8bn) in military assistance since 2002. But the Pakistanis have good reasons of their own to end the tribal imbroglio. A number of suicide attacks on military targets over the past year originated in Waziristan. The latest blast on Sunday, at a military bakery in north-western Mardan, killed 13 people and wounded 20.

On Saturday the Taliban released Islamabad's kidnapped ambassador to Afghanistan, Tariq Azizuddin, after 97 days in captivity. He was set free from a house in Mehsud territory.

But US patience with Pakistan is wearing thin. Last week a US predator drone fired missiles into a house in the tribal belt where an al-Qaida member was allegedly staying - the fourth such attack this year. Pakistani public opinion was outraged.

"Completely counterproductive," said a military spokesman, Major General Athar Abbas, in Spinkai. "It is helping none of the sides."

Cooperation is hobbled by the two countries' divergent perspectives. Pakistani officers privately consider the Taliban insurgency as a Pashtun rebellion against a puppet, western-backed government in Kabul. And they make it clear that their priority is to quell violence inside Pakistan - and not necessarily hunt for al-Qaida fugitives.

On Sunday Khan showed journalists a video, seized near Spinkai, of a masked man giving bombing lessons to a class of child jihadis wearing white headbands. Later in the clip young fighters are seen beheading a captured soldier in gory detail.

The Americans are nervously watching peace negotiations between the newly elected civilian government and Mehsud. Previous talks, notably in September 2006, collapsed within months.

In Spinkai officers said they believed collective punishment had brought Mehsud to the negotiating table. "He is being forced to the table because of this destruction," said Lieutenant Colonel Asmat Nawaz, standing before a crushed house.

But few would admit another possibility - that their iron-fisted action would trigger a new wave of local anger, and a fresh generation of Baitullah Mehsuds.
 
Wonder where will all this lead to. But honestly, I just don't see any other "solution." Talks with fundamentalists are a no-go; measures that really help (education, jobs, etc.) are too slow. The only option left is force. May be the Army could try some CBMs with the villagers of the region, i.e., vocational education, small time jobs, etc.
 
I wonder how those who have a soft corner for these Islamic ''fighters'' would react to this.

Personally, I think it is a very correct action by the PA.

It is better to sort these terrorists out since at least some action is being done to their near daily mayhem and attacks.
 
i think this idea if collective punishment is going to come back and haunt us. this will only turn the people against us. i am for the first time disipointed in ht army
 
i think this idea if collective punishment is going to come back and haunt us. this will only turn the people against us. i am for the first time disipointed in ht army

This isn't the Army's creation - it is part of the FCR.

In terms of opinion, there was an article in the Daily Times that talked of that, and it seems that most Tribal analysts seem to think that the people will turn against B Mehsud.
 
‘Army relocation to allow return of displaced people’
Monday, May 19, 2008
SPINKAI: “The Pakistan Army is not withdrawing from Waziristan, rather it is relocating its positions to facilitate the displaced civilians to return to their homes.”

This was stated by Maj-Gen Athar Abbas during a detailed briefing to foreign and local media personnel, who were taken on a tour of the area by the ISPR. Earlier, the media teams at Dera Ismail Khan were briefed by Maj-Gen Tariq Khan, GOC 14 Div, on Operation Zalzala carried out by the Army to clear South Waziristan of miscreants and restore law and order.

The general reiterated that Pakistan Army was operating in accordance with the government’s policy and would now ensure the return of the civilian population. The GOC provided details of the Army operation after the brutal act of Baitullah Mehsud who razed the Sararogha Fort and slaughtered some FC personnel on Jan l6, 2008.

He said the operation was carried out in three phases and areas of Spinkai, Kotkai and beyond Kotkai were respectively cleaned up of the miscreants in four days. Replying to a question, the general responded that not a single civilian casualty took place since leaflets were distributed in the area for civilians to vacate, who moved out and nearly 200,000 civilians are located in different camps. Those remaining were miscreants, who chose to fight and have either been killed or retreated from the area.

He said the Army was constructing roads, providing electricity and food and ensuring other facilities of the life to the people of South Waziristan to bring them into national mainstream. In order to reduce the influence of Talibanisation, three FM channels have been set up to provide wholesome and meaningful programmes, he informed the media personnel.

In response to a question whether the miscreants would not return to the area once they are relocated, the GOC stated that the Army would keep monitoring the area, carry out patrolling to ensure the miscreants do not return.

He said the return of the civilians was taken up with the help of the Maliks and Tribal elders to ensure their safe and permanent return, adding, local “Aman” committees and village based defence set ups were being formed for the complete restoration of the peace.

The GOC informed that 52 children, who were trained to be suicide bombers, were recovered and have been handed over to an NGO “Save the Children” for better upkeep and enabling them to return to normal lives.

Later, the media team was taken to Spinkai near Jandolla and briefed by Brigadier Ali Abbas. The media personnel were shown two factories, where suicide bomber’s jackets and other explosive devices were made by miscreants. Locations of bunkers, dugouts, terrorist training camps and ammunition dumps were also shown, which have now been destroyed by the Army.

Some displaced persons from Tank, Sarrarogha, Spinkai and Jandola were also introduced to the media teams. Nawabzada Siddiq Khan of Tank said that the people of the area welcome the government and the Army and were not in support of the miscreants but were forced to obey them. Most of the displaced persons opined that they were keen to return to their homes and informed the media persons that the cases of terrorism have reduced considerably since the Army Operation.
http://www.thenews.com.pk/arc_default.asp
 
Khalid Aziz, former NWFP chief secretary and expert on tribal affairs, said the displacement was “one of the biggest in tribal history” adding that human cost of the conflict in Waziristan “has gone unrecorded”.

He said the operation was like a double-edged sword. “On one hand, you punished the population for harbouring terrorists ... and on the other hand, Baitullah Mehsud has become unpopular among the locals because he is equally responsible for their sufferings,” argued Aziz, who says the government did not use the occasion to spread anti-Baitullah feelings among the displaced people.

Gen Tariq said: “[The displaced people] say that one side there are Taliban and on other there are pareshan (Urdu word for ‘worried’, referring to the army).”

An army-guided trip to the area let the media see abandoned houses and a destroyed bazaar that evinced the scale of conflict in which civilians are suffering no less than the militants.

“Displacement is a big story, and civilians appear to have been caught between the devil and the deep sea,” TV journalist Talat Hussain said, letting no moment and place go unrecorded by his digital video camera.

Tribal journalist Sailab Mehsud said many of the displaced people went to their relatives as far as in Karachi, some rented houses in nearby Tank and Dera Ismail Khan districts while those who could not afford either went to army-run camps.

He believed the displacement would make the affected people want Baitullah Mehsud to stop his activities or leave their area so that their sufferings end.

But the government will also be criticised for letting the situation reach this point, he told Daily Times by phone from Dera Ismail Khan.

Troops had taken positions at heights raising privacy concerns in nearby homes.

“We understand the local sensitivity about privacy,” the brigadier from Lahore said. “That is why we are moving from one height to another.”

The displaced people’s return does not look imminent as the government looks at mechanisms to stop the return of militants and provide compensation to the most affected people.

“The compensation would heal the wounds of the displaced people,” Aziz said.
Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
Another article that talks of the suffering of the people displaced due to the operation, and how they support the GoP.

The IDPs, surviving barely at subsistence level in the make-shift camps, with one voice said that they supported the Pakistan Army and the Government of Pakistan and were keen to return to their homes. DG ISPR explained that the Pakistan Army was relocating its positions to dominating heights to enable the IDPs to return.
The Waziristan tragedy | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online
 
guardian.co.uk home | guardian.co.uk

Demolished by the Pakistan army: the frontier village punished for harbouring the Taliban

· 200,000 flee after attack on militant stronghold
· Soldiers say schools for suicide bombers found

Declan Walsh in Spinkai, South Waziristan The Guardian, Tuesday May 20

Pakistani soldiers seen from a departing helicopter in Spinkai, a town that has been the scene of fierce fighting between the Pakistani army and Taliban militants. Photograph: Declan Walsh

A fading photo tossed on an empty bed is all that remains of the interrupted lives in Spinkai, a desolate Pakistani village that has endured the wrath of the army's "collective punishment".

In the image a laughing young man in a jet-black turban brandishes his rifle like a trophy. Beside him stand two little girls in bright frocks, giggling with glee. Now they have fled, and so has everyone else.

An estimated 200,000 villagers have been displaced since the Pakistani army attacked the mountain redoubt of Baitullah Mehsud, the leader of the Pakistani Taliban and a suspect in the assassination of Benazir Bhutto four months ago.

The operation was called zalzala - Urdu for earthquake. One of the first villages they hit was Spinkai, nestled under a line of jagged hills at the gateway to the Mehsud stronghold in South Waziristan.

The army swept through with helicopter gunships, artillery and tanks that crunched across a parched riverbed. After four days of heavy fighting - 25 militants and six soldiers died, the army said - the militants retreated up the valley.

In their wake, the soldiers said, they discovered bomb factories and schools for teenage suicide bombers. Waziristan is the hub of a surge in suicide attacks in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The local people had already fled to refugee camps in nearby North-West Frontier province. But army retaliation against them - for allowing the militants to operate - was swift and harsh.

Bulldozers and explosives experts turned Spinkai's bazaar into a mile-long pile of rubble. Petrol stations, shops, even parts of the hospital, were levelled or blown up.

Four months later the villagers are forbidden from returning home. Their wheat is ******* in the fields. But Pakistani commanders insist they have been merciful in their application of "collective punishment" - a practice invented by the British who demarcated the tribal areas over a century ago.

Walking through the bullet-pocked rubble, Brigadier Ali Abbas pointed to alleged bomb factories. His troops had recovered 12 detonation-ready suicide jackets, he said, and many others in preparation.

"As per the frontier crimes regulations I should have destroyed everyone's house, but I didn't. Call it my weakness. Call it kindness," he said with a wry laugh.

As a fresh round of peace negotiations with militants stumbles forward, the Pakistani army wants to show that it means business. On Sunday a small group of journalists were flown to the tribal belt, where officers denied suggestions that they were "going soft" on militants.

"This is a complete siege of the Mehsud area," said Major General Tariq Khan, one of three battlefield commanders.

But the militants are beaten back, not defeated. Khan admitted that his troops had withdrawn to fringe positions, such as Spinkai, leaving Mehsud and his men free to roam the centre.

The army is also reacting to intense American pressure. In recent months US officials have vocally re-aired their view that the tribal belt is a major Taliban rear base for attacks in Afghanistan, and a headquarters for al-Qaida's high command.

In March the CIA director, Michael Hayden, warned that the lawless area presented a "clear and present danger" to the west, and was the likely source of any future attack on America. On Sunday the new prime minister, Yousaf Raza Gilani, met President George Bush on the fringes of a conference in Egypt to discuss the situation.

The US is bankrolling the operations in North and South Waziristan, giving at least $5.5bn (about £2.8bn) in military assistance since 2002. But the Pakistanis have good reasons of their own to end the tribal imbroglio. A number of suicide attacks on military targets over the past year originated in Waziristan. The latest blast on Sunday, at a military bakery in north-western Mardan, killed 13 people and wounded 20.

On Saturday the Taliban released Islamabad's kidnapped ambassador to Afghanistan, Tariq Azizuddin, after 97 days in captivity. He was set free from a house in Mehsud territory.

But US patience with Pakistan is wearing thin. Last week a US predator drone fired missiles into a house in the tribal belt where an al-Qaida member was allegedly staying - the fourth such attack this year. Pakistani public opinion was outraged.

"Completely counterproductive," said a military spokesman, Major General Athar Abbas, in Spinkai. "It is helping none of the sides."

Cooperation is hobbled by the two countries' divergent perspectives. Pakistani officers privately consider the Taliban insurgency as a Pashtun rebellion against a puppet, western-backed government in Kabul. And they make it clear that their priority is to quell violence inside Pakistan - and not necessarily hunt for al-Qaida fugitives.

On Sunday Khan showed journalists a video, seized near Spinkai, of a masked man giving bombing lessons to a class of child jihadis wearing white headbands. Later in the clip young fighters are seen beheading a captured soldier in gory detail.

The Americans are nervously watching peace negotiations between the newly elected civilian government and Mehsud. Previous talks, notably in September 2006, collapsed within months.

In Spinkai officers said they believed collective punishment had brought Mehsud to the negotiating table. "He is being forced to the table because of this destruction," said Lieutenant Colonel Asmat Nawaz, standing before a crushed house.

But few would admit another possibility - that their iron-fisted action would trigger a new wave of local anger, and a fresh generation of Baitullah Mehsuds.

Article sounds like bull..On the one hand Pakistan doesn't do enough..On the other it goes round killing people for no reason according to the media. Believe what you will..I don't believe any state army would kill its own people for no reason.
 
Another article that talks of the suffering of the people displaced due to the operation, and how they support the GoP.

The Waziristan tragedy | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online
remember AM, this is what i said in the kashmir threads earlier. apparently someone i was debating couldn't grasp the argument. baitullah's own tribe doesn't even support him, it's only out of fear that they may be beheaded or accused of being a spy.

this guy is nuts, even from the view of the afghan taliban for going against a muslim army. his attack on the tribal elders was perhaps the stupidest move ever for any militant leader, how does he expect to gain masses?

on top of that he coordinated this attack with uzbeks, it's apparent to the pashtun population that mehsud is helping uzbeks take over their land. this is just one of the many articles concerning the displeasure of the mehsud tribe.
 
I would add a word of caution here. We have previously seen the tribes reneging on agreements in one or another guise. They only use the period to rearm and regroup. I still think although we should strive to reach an agreement, we should position the army to watch their activities. The other thing to note is that the west should honor their commitment to provide money for the uplift of the region. If they dont come up with the goods then we should make a fuss over it.
araz
 
remember AM, this is what i said in the kashmir threads earlier. apparently someone i was debating couldn't grasp the argument. baitullah's own tribe doesn't even support him, it's only out of fear that they may be beheaded or accused of being a spy.

Isn't it the case wherever terrorists operate?

And is that any reason not to squash them everywhere?

If one joins the terrorists or supports the terrorists, he is against established authority. Therefore, he has no place in society and society and its agencies must combat him and this menace.
 
I would add a word of caution here. We have previously seen the tribes reneging on agreements in one or another guise. They only use the period to rearm and regroup. I still think although we should strive to reach an agreement, we should position the army to watch their activities. The other thing to note is that the west should honor their commitment to provide money for the uplift of the region. If they dont come up with the goods then we should make a fuss over it.
araz

Araz,

One could argue that the traditional Tribal leadership is as much of a hindrance as the Taliban. It isn't that the Pashtun Tribesmen savor reneging on agreements, I think it is the fact that they are essentially held hostage to the whims of either the Tribal elders or the Taliban leadership.

Why would the average Tribesman not want to ratify and stick to agreements that ensure peace in his village and offer the promise of development and more opportunity for his children?

I think the PPP and ANP argument of extending the Political Parties Act into FATA and PATA is a valid one. Trying to accomplish that without appearing like we are going to renege on our promise of continued autonomy and respect for the Tribes custom is tricky.
 
But isn't it a tribal dictum that Jaan Jaye, Wachan na jaye!

One may die, but one's word is sacrosanct!
 
Back
Top Bottom