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Pakistani flooding could lead to Taliban's resurgence

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Pakistani flooding could lead to Taliban's resurgence

By Griff Witte
Sunday, August 8, 2010; 1:44 PM

CHARSADDA, PAKISTAN -- The slow-motion disaster underway in Pakistan as floodwaters seep into virtually every corner of the nation has devastated basic infrastructure and could open the door to a Taliban resurgence, officials here say.

The emerging landscape in areas where the water has receded is one in which bridges, roads, schools, health clinics, power facilities and sewage systems have all been ruined or seriously damaged. With swollen rivers still churning southwards, the destruction is spreading by the hour.

On a visit to a newly flooded area in Pakistan's south on Sunday, Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani said the overall impact of the flooding now tops that from the 2005 Kashmir earthquake -- a view echoed by international aid officials.

Though the quake killed far more people -- at least 73,000, compared to the 1,600 who have died in the floods -- Gillani called the scale of physical damage "beyond imagination. . . . Our country has gone back several years."

Pakistan can ill afford that kind of regression as it battles a vicious insurgency that capitalizes on the government's failure to provide basic services.

Over the past year, Pakistan's army has succeeded in driving Taliban fighters out of key sanctuaries in South Waziristan and the Swat Valley. But the damage from the floods could jeopardize those gains, officials acknowledge, unless infrastructure is quickly rebuilt -- an undertaking that will cost billions of dollars and will likely take years.

Swat, one of the worst affected areas, is a prime example.

While the valley was once known for its moderate public attitudes and picture-perfect mountain views, militants were able to take over in recent years by capitalizing on residents' hostility toward a government that often seemed distant and indifferent.

Last summer, the army took the valley back with a major offensive, and it launched a series of public works projects intended to repair the damage. The efforts were starting to pay off: Just last month, residents celebrated traditional agricultural festivals without fear of violence, and tourists packed newly reopened hotels.

But then on July 28, the floods hit. Army officials say that every major bridge in the valley was destroyed, and aerial photographs of the region show that rivers have been diverted -- perhaps permanently -- down the center of once thriving bazaars.

"It will take us months just to get the electricity back in Swat. For now, people are living in darkness," said Rahim Dad Khan, the planning minister for northwestern Pakistan.

Khan said all plans for development in the northwest have been cancelled, and the money diverted to reconstruction. "We thought we would build roads, hospitals and schools. But now, everything we were planning is ruined," he said.

Army officials say they are aware that the Taliban could try to seize the opportunity, but that they will not let that happen.

"We have not let down our guard. The safeguards are still in place," said Brig. Gen. Tippu Karim, who is overseeing relief efforts for Swat and other northwestern areas.

Karim said reconstruction will be the top priority as soon as Pakistan can get past the immediate challenge of rescuing stranded residents and providing them with food and shelter.

But even that has proved a monumental challenge, and by the account of the floods' victims, the government has failed. At the provincial disaster management office, beleaguered staffers admit that they lack the necessary resources. More than 15 million people nationwide have been affected by the floods, according to government estimates, and a majority are in the northwest.

"We never imagined this scale of disaster, so we were not prepared," said Asif Ali, the province's relief director. Even when the scope of the crisis became clear, he said, "each district was cut off from the others. The communications networks were jammed. So the government machinery was paralyzed."

The continuing rains have not helped, thwarting efforts to reach some of the floods' most isolated victims.

The U.S. military has sent six helicopters, 91 troops and hundreds of thousands of meals from neighboring Afghanistan to help with relief efforts in Swat. But since Thursday, when the crews flew in supplies and evacuated hundreds of stranded residents, storms and overcast skies have kept the choppers grounded.

Frustrated pilots -- both Pakistani and American -- sipped tea and waited for the go-ahead to fly on Sunday at an air base in northern Pakistan. The presence of U.S. troops on the ground in Pakistan has the potential to kick up controversy, given the deep mistrust here of American motivations. But U.S. Maj. Daniel Rice, who is overseeing U.S. efforts, said the reaction so far to his troops' presence has been "smiles, waves and thumbs-up."

That view is reflected by residents in the informal refugee camps that have sprung up in schools, public parks and along roadsides across the northwest. Those left homeless -- at least 1.5 million in the northwest alone -- say they will take help from anywhere they can get it.

Islamic charities, including ones that are known fronts for banned militant groups, have begun distributing assistance in some areas, as have Western non-governmental organizations. But for the most part, residents say they are receiving no aid at all.

In the median strip of the recently completed highway that links the northwest with the rest of Pakistan, thousands of displaced villagers have set up tents in the mud and tethered their livestock to the guardrails.

From the strip, they can see what's left of their humble brick homes, which were inhabited only weeks ago but now resemble long-abandoned ruins. Above a see of gray waters that have yet to drain away, the tips of their corn and sugar cane plants are also visible. Once a vibrant green, they are fast ******* to brown.

"All the local roads are destroyed. All the schools are destroyed. We never had any medical facilities," said Obaid ur-Rehman, 26, who was forced to relocate to the median strip.

The national highway authority has tried to shoo the residents away, wanting to maintain appearances along a roadway that is one of the most visible signs of modern Pakistani infrastructure. But residents say they say have nowhere to go because everywhere else is vulnerable to future flooding.

"This is the basic reason for militancy: anger at the government," Rehman said. "If we had a place to live, if we had food, if we had schools, there would be no militancy in Pakistan."

Mohammed Riaz, a fellow median resident and father of seven, said the only sign of government assistance he has seen in the 10 days since flood waters destroyed his home came when a helicopter swooped low. From the side of the chopper, soldiers dropped packages of food. A mad scramble ensued. But the contents turned out to be rancid, and the government's gesture only added to the hostility.


"Some old biscuits were thrown from the helicopter," Riaz said. "But the people threw them back."
 
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The busy roadside aid station for flood victims seemed ordinary enough. Huge pots were lined up to distribute cooked food to the hungry. An ambulance, now no longer needed to ferry the injured, was being loaded up with bundles of second-hand clothing to be given away. But rather than being run by a humanitarian agency or government officials, the aid station on the outskirts of Charsadda, a town in the north-west that has seen some of the worst flooding in Pakistan, was set up by a group alleged to be international terrorists.

Jamaat-ud-Dawa, a hardline Islamist organisation thought to be a front for Lashkar-e-Taiba, the group blamed for the 2008 assault on Mumbai, said it had 2,000 members working for flood relief across the north-west of the country and down into Punjab province.

With the government overwhelmed by the scale of the disaster, the worst flooding in Pakistan in at least 80 years, a gap has opened up for well-organised Islamic groups, mainstream and extremist.

They have been able to win hearts and minds in a region most hit by militancy and the threat of a Taliban takeover. Across the deluged north-west, locals complained bitterly that government help was almost entirely absent.

The UN said today that the flooding, caused by monsoon rain, has now affected 3 million people, with the death toll put at around 1,500 by the provincial government.

The World Food Programme estimated 1.8 million to be in urgent need of water, food and shelter. An outbreak of water-borne diseases such as cholera is now feared.

In the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, homes, businesses and crops have been washed away. Roads and electricity networks have collapsed, with 91 bridges in the province and 10,000 power lines ripped down by the raging waters. Rising water levels have threatened Pakistan's third-largest dam, the Warsak, prompting relief officials to ask residents in the northern outskirts of Peshawar to leave their homes. The floods are now reaching further south in the Punjab province, as the waters surge down country.

At the aid station Hajji Makbool Shah, a 55-year-old flood volunteer, said he was a member of Jamaat-ud-Dawa but distribution was under the Falah-e-Insaniyat arm of the organisation.

"If the government were doing this work, there would be no need for us," he said. "When the floods came, we carried people out on our shoulders, to our own ambulances. Where were the government ambulances?"

Yaya Mujahid, spokesman for JuD, said the group was working with Falah-e-Insaniyat. "We're present to help in all the places where the floodwaters have gone," said Mujahid.

Lashkar-e-Taiba was banned in Pakistan in 2002, after which the group used Jamaat-ud-Dawa as its name – though it claims to be unrelated to LeT. When David Cameron controversially last week accused Pakistan of "exporting terror", Jamaat-ud-Dawa would be one of the groups foremost in his mind. It exists in a legally ambiguous status in Pakistan.

Following huge international pressure in the aftermath of the Mumbai attack, in which more than 160 people were killed, and the UN passing a resolution proscribing the JuD, Pakistan outlawed the outfit. However, a subsequent court challenge by the group's leader, Hafiz Saeed, successfully argued that no actual legal order had been passed. JuD was also active in the aid effort after the massive 2005 earthquake in northern Pakistan, even winning international praise for its work, and also in caring for those displaced from the Swat valley last year when the army mounted an operation to recapture the area from the Taliban.

Just down the road from the JuD aid station, another Islamic group, Al-Khidmat Foundation, this one perfectly legal, was housing around 380 families left destitute by the floods, in two private school buildings. Al-Khidmat is part of a mainstream but fundamentalist political party, Jamaat-e-Islami.

"The government is paralysed," said Javed Khan, head of the local branch of Al-Khidmat. "The whole province is in trouble and the authorities are absent."

Inside the school, Naila Fazli Rabi, an 18-year-old woman who had been given shelter there, said the water had been about 12ft high and had swept her family home away in the nearby village of Arbab Korna.

"Al-Khidmat is helping us, the government has given us nothing," said Rabi. "We had spent 3m rupees (£23,000) on the house. Now we cannot even dream of rebuilding it. I don't even have 30 rupees."

A senior Charsadda administration official, Kamran Rehman Khan, said that around 500,000 people had been affected by the flooding in his district alone, out of a population of 1.7 million.

He said he was unaware of the activities of Falah-e-Insaniyat or Jamaat-ud-Dawa in the area. "The magnitude of the problem is such that any government in the world would struggle to cope with it," said Khan. "We were not prepared for such a big disaster."

The British colonial government had built a local headworks back in the early 1920s, he said, that could hold 174,000 cusecs of water, but 400,000 cusecs had come gushing down, blowing away its gates. "We had banked on British engineering, designed to cope with the worst flood situation, but it failed us," said Khan.
 
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I was waiting when such piece of junk would start getting printed.

They will not let Pakistan live at peace that easily.

One after another, idiotic / stupid / nonsense articles of such nature would keep coming.

Recently there was wikileaks, and now a flurry of such articles would start coming up.
 
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It always amuse me how foreigners know more about Pakistan than locals?
There are no such reports by zardari govt. or any private media!
People in Pakistan are bussy helping and touring as far as they can but no such thing ever come to attention!
 
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It always amuse me how foreigners know more about Pakistan than locals?
There are no such reports by zardari govt. or any private media!
People in Pakistan are bussy helping and touring as far as they can but no such thing ever come to attention!

If Kashmir earth quake was used as a context. How the religious group used that oppurtunity to blend with population and help them in the name of aid and there by recruiting people, who have seen the callous government inaction to their aid.

US Amry helicopters are now flying in Pakistan aiding civilians, so may be the foriegners know more than the "locals".
 
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If Pakistan government leaves the flood victims to their fate and if the only saviors for them are charity fronts of terrorist organizations then what else is expected. Sooner than later, these organizations will start recruiting some of them into their ranks. The problem is more real than what people may think here and there is also precedent when such charity fronts during earth quake in Pakistan have utilized the opportunity to swell their ranks.
 
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If Kashmir earth quake was used as a context. How the religious group used that oppurtunity to blend with population and help them in the name of aid and there by recruiting people, who have seen the callous government inaction to their aid.

US Amry helicopters are now flying in Pakistan aiding civilians, so may be the foriegners know more than the "locals".

Yeah by flying helicopter u can know everything.......BS

Yeah tell me did they send u the recruitment letter in 2005 coz we didnt know abt tht and u r the one informing us tht this happens in 2005 Earthquake relief activities .
If u dont have any proof then plz stop trolling.

JUD has helped many and now is helping many and i dont see they are creating any problem for us.
 
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If Kashmir earth quake was used as a context. How the religious group used that oppurtunity to blend with population and help them in the name of aid and there by recruiting people, who have seen the callous government inaction to their aid.
Do you have a proof?

US Amry helicopters are now flying in Pakistan aiding civilians, so may be the foriegners know more than the "locals".
Is this what US helicopters reported? or it is made in !ndia?
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by InPhilTraitor
If Kashmir earth quake was used as a context. How the religious group used that oppurtunity to blend with population and help them in the name of aid and there by recruiting people, who have seen the callous government inaction to their aid.
Do you have a proof?

Quote:
US Amry helicopters are now flying in Pakistan aiding civilians, so may be the foriegners know more than the "locals".
Is this what US helicopters reported? or it is made in !ndia?

Common man Don't ask them proofs Don't you know there is no proof needed to prove the truth:rofl:

Is this what US helicopters reported? or it is made in !ndia?

Common India has a strong industrial base and they produce everything of their own including their news. So this is also Made In India, they don't need US AID to make news!

Anyway,
If there is any possibility about Taliban then its only one and that is Maybe after the flooding ends we might get a news that Pakistan is free from terrorism all the terrorists were swept away by floods.:azn:
 
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One more thing, If Taliban fanboys think that Taliban will lure people with their helping hands then don't forget the aid that our army has been in the past and is currently giving to the people,which might result in 170 million recruits for the Army!!!!

I know Taliban fan boys are always blind to see positive side of the picture.
 
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Do you have a proof?
Tahreek e Taliban Pakistan was confined to FATA in the pre-earth quake world, but they have expanded their operations outside of that area post-earth quake. Carrying out bombings across pakistani population centers, and mounting a campaign on SWAT. The evidence is circumstantial.
Is this what US helicopters reported? or it is made in !ndia?

Bad weather grounds relief helicopters in flood-ravaged northwestern Pakistan | StarTribune.com

I rest my case.
 
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I was waiting when such piece of junk would start getting printed.

They will not let Pakistan live at peace that easily.

One after another, idiotic / stupid / nonsense articles of such nature would keep coming.

Recently there was wikileaks, and now a flurry of such articles would start coming up.

Discarding this article, I do believe that there's a slight possibility that the Taliban would open up their hiring centers.

Reason is quite simple. People are out on the street waiting for food, water and medicine to arrive. They don't have a roof on their heads and right now there's an air of hopelessness amongst the camps and refugees.

The Taliban can easily manipulate these situations and start hiring people by giving them false promises of shelter, financial support and basic human rights. That's one of their primary hiring technique. Assurances of financial support to a man's family if he's out there doing "Jihad" against the Pakistan Army/Citizens.
 
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Well i do hope that if they ever come to power against all ods, please hang all our politicians especially Ganja, Bulldog and Mr 10%
 
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