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Sharif raises alarm over Taliban

The NAR is defined by the state and the systems laid out in the NAR are controlled by the State.

The NAR is therefore not the issue, the issue is whether the Taliban will disarm in exchange for the implementation of the Nizam-e-Adl.
The NAR emboldens their resolve to arm further and demand more NARs.

NAR is granted by the province, but its not really defined by it, now is it? Its all up to the Sufi's discretion. He may decide to behead everyone tomorrow or open up strip joints in Swat, its all up to him.
 
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The NAR emboldens their resolve to arm further and demand more NARs.
Yes - that was always the risk if they didn't disarm, which is why disarmament was a condition. But if they didn't disarm, you'd be back where you started from - fighting them for control, so it was wort a shot provided the GoP is actually sincere when it says it will act if the Taliban do not disarm.

NAR is granted by the province, but its not really defined by it, now is it? Its all up to the Sufi's discretion. He may decide to behead everyone tomorrow or open up strip joints in Swat, its all up to him.

Technically NAR is defined by the province in that the Qazi's will answer to the Peshawar High Court and appointments will be by the NWFP government, and not the Taliban.

High court to have control over Qazis: NWFP AG
 
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Nawaz comes out of the closet

Thursday, April 23, 2009

The disquiet expressed by Nawaz Sharif over aspects of the Swat peace deal marks a significant break with his past public posture on the Taliban and offers a glimmer of hope for those seeking a united front to tackle the growing threat of militancy. In an interview to USA Today, the former prime minister was more critical than normal of the Taliban and their threat to export their harsh version of Sharia and capture power in other parts of the country. He stated unequivocally that any deal with the militants must not allow democracy to be derailed or the writ of the government to be challenged. This marks an important shift for a leader who has long been accused of being soft on the Taliban and displaying an unacceptable degree of ambivalence in his public stance on the threat the militants pose.

Two factors seem to have pushed Nawaz Sharif towards finally drawing this red line. First, the initial public euphoria over the Swat peace deal, which was seen as offering a glimmer of hope in ending the bloodshed in the area, seems to be diminishing. The inflammatory statements by Sufi Mohammad against parliament and the judiciary, the expansionist forays of the Taliban into districts neighbouring Swat and the continuing spate of suicide attacks have caused alarm bells to rings even among those initially willing to give the peace deal the benefit of the doubt. There has been a distinct shift in public opinion, not least in Punjab, Nawaz Sharif's power base. Ever the populist, Sharif seems to have sensed the changing public mood.

Second, and perhaps more significantly, the world is beginning to pay attention to Nawaz Sharif, particularly after his role in the lawyers' long march hit the headlines worldwide. For too long, the west had written off Nawaz Sharif as someone too close to the religious right in his approach towards the war on terror and the threat of extremism. In recent weeks, the former prime minister has seen a steady trickle of western notables knocking at his door, eager to rebuild links with a person they see as a potential future prime minister. Having disastrously put all their eggs in the Musharraf basket in the past, the west has clearly decided to hedge its bets this time round. Sharif's change of tune over the Taliban is clearly an attempt to dispel the western suspicion that he is a closet extremist at heart.

The break with the ambivalence of the past will strengthen the hands of those who have called for a broad national consensus to face the extremist threat. After all, the PML-N is the second largest party in the country and has a massive support base in Punjab. Nawaz Sharif's belated decision to come off the fence could be a sign that important sections of the population have finally decided to come out of denial mode and accept that the extremists are indeed knocking at the door.
Nawaz comes out of the closet
 
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I don't think nawaz is the answer....i don't think we have an answer..in terms of having one strong leader...we do not have this luxury, so we must do without it.

we must collectively stop this trhead,...us...civilians, armymen, lawyers, teachers, labourers, expats, journalists, maulvis, students, housewives...nothing else will do.
 
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