Friday March 27, 2009




PAKISTAN: CHRISTIANS BRACE FOR SHARIA IN SWAT VALLEY

<http://www.compassdirect.org/en/display.php?page=news&lang=en&length=long&idelement=5858>http://www.compassdirect.org/en/display.php?page=news&lang=en&length=long&idelement=5858
 



Accepting Islamic law in exchange for peace leaves many uncertain, fearful.

ISTANBUL, March 27 (Compass Direct News) – Just 
over a month since Pakistan’s fertile Swat Valley 
turned into a Taliban stronghold where sharia 
(Islamic law) rules, the fate of the remaining 
Christians in the area is uncertain.

Last month, in an effort to end a bloody two-year 
battle, the Islamabad administration struck a 
deal with Taliban forces surrendering all 
governance of Swat Valley in the North West 
Frontier Province (NWFP). Sources told Compass 
that after the violence that has killed and 
displaced hundreds, an estimated 500 Christians 
remain in the area. Traditionally these have been 
low-skilled workers, but younger, more educated 
Christians work as nurses, teachers and in various other professions.

The sole Church of Pakistan congregation in Swat, 
consisting of 40 families, has been renting space 
for nearly 100 years. The government has never 
given them permission to buy land in order to build a church building.

An associate pastor of the church in central Swat 
told Yousaf Benjamin of the National Commission 
for Justice and Peace that with the bombing of 
girls schools at the end of last year, all 
Christian families migrated to nearby districts. 
After the peace deal and with guarded hope for 
normalcy and continued education for their 
children, most of the families have returned to 
their homes but are reluctant to attend church.

The associate pastor, who requested anonymity, 
today told sources that “people don’t come to the 
church as they used to come before.” He said that 
although the Taliban has made promises of peace, 
the Christian community has yet to believe the 
Muslim extremists will hold to them.

“The people don’t rely on Taliban assurances,” said Benjamin.

Last week the associate pastor met with the third 
in command of the main Taliban militant umbrella 
group in Pakistan, Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, 
Kari Abdullah, and requested land in order to 
build a church. Abdullah reportedly agreed, 
saying that Islam is a religion of peace and 
equality, and that his group intended to provide 
equal opportunities to the religious communities of Swat.

The Catholic Church in Swat is located in a 
school compound that was bombed late last year. 
Run by nuns and operated under the Catholic 
Church Peshawar Diocese, the church has been 
closed for the last two years since insurgents 
have been fighting government led forces, source said.

Parliamentarian Shahbaz Bhatti said Christians 
and the few Hindus in Swat valley have lived 
under terror and harassment by the Taliban since 
insurgents began efforts to seize control of the 
region. He met with a delegation of Christians 
from Swat last month who said they were concerned 
about their future, but Bhatti said only time 
will tell how the changes will affect Christians.

“The Christian delegation told me that they favor 
the peace pact if indeed it can bring peace, 
stability and security to the people living 
there,” he said. “But they also shared their 
concern that if there is enforcement of sharia, 
what will be their future? But we will see how it will be implemented.”

Although there have been no direct threats 
against Christians since the establishment of the 
peace accord, some advocates fear that it may only be a matter of time.

“These days, there are no reports of persecution 
in Swat,” Lahore-based reporter Felix Qaiser of 
Asia News told Compass by phone, noting the 
previous two years of threatening letters, 
kidnappings and aggression against Christians by 
Islamic extremists. “But even though since the 
implementation of sharia there have been no such 
reports, we are expecting them. We’re expecting 
this because other faiths won’t be tolerated.”

Qaiser also expressed concern about the treatment of women.

“They won’t be allowed to move freely and without 
veils,” he said. “And we’re very much concerned about their education there.”

In the past year, more than 200 girls schools in 
Swat were reported to have been burned down or bombed by Islamic extremists.

Remaining girls schools were closed down in 
January but have been re-opened since the peace 
agreement in mid-February. Girls under the age of 13 are allowed to attend.

Since the deal was struck, seven new sharia 
judges have been installed, and earlier this 
month lawyers were trained in the nuances of 
Islamic law. Those not trained are not permitted 
to exercise their profession. As of this week, 
Non-Governmental Organizations are no longer 
permitted in the area and vaccinations have been banned.

“These are the fist fruits of Islamic law, and 
we’re expecting worse things – Islamic punishment 
such as cutting off hands, because no one can 
dictate to them,” Qaiser said. Everything is 
according to their will and their own interpretation of Islamic law.”

Launch Point for Taliban

Analysts and sources on the ground have expressed 
skepticism in the peace deal brokered by 
pro-Taliban religious leader Maulana Sufi 
Muhammad, who is also the leader of 
Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi. The 
insurgent, who has long fought for implementation 
of sharia in the region, has also fought 
alongside the Taliban against U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

He was imprisoned and released under a peace deal 
in April 2008 in an effort to restore normalcy in 
the Swat Valley. Taliban militants in the Swat 
area are under the leadership of his son-in-law, Maulana Fazlullah.

The agreement to implement sharia triggered alarm 
around the world that militants will be 
emboldened in the northwest of Pakistan, a hotbed 
for Taliban and Al-Qaeda extremists fighting 
Western forces in Afghanistan and bent on overthrowing its government.

Joe Grieboski of the Institute on Religion and 
Public Policy said the peace deal makes 
Talibanization guaranteed by law, rendering it 
impossible to return to a liberal democracy or 
any guarantee of fundamental rights.

“The government in essence ceded the region to 
the Taliban,” said Grieboski. “Clerical rule over 
the region will fulfill the desires of the 
extremists, and we’ll see the region become a 
copy of what Afghanistan looked like under Taliban rule.”

This can only mean, he added, that the Taliban 
will have more power to promulgate their ideology 
and power even as the Pakistani administration continues to weaken.

“Unfortunately, this also creates a safe 
launching off point for Taliban forces to advance 
politically, militarily and ideologically into 
other areas of the country,” said Grieboski. “The 
peace deal further demonstrates the impotence of 
[Asif Ali] Zardari as president.”

Grieboski said the peace deal further 
demonstrates that Pakistani elites – and 
President Zardari in particular – are less 
concerned about fundamental rights, freedom and 
democracy than about establishing a false sense of security in the country.

“This peace deal will not last, as the extremists 
will demand more and more, and Zardari and the 
government have placed themselves in a weakened 
position and will once again have to give in,” said Grieboski.

Sohail Johnson, chief coordinator of advocacy 
group Sharing Life Ministry Pakistan, said he 
fears that militants in Swat will now be able to 
freely create training centers and continue to attack the rest of Pakistan.

“They will become stronger, and this will be the 
greatest threat for Christians living in Pakistan,” said Johnson.

Thus far the government has not completely bowed 
to Taliban demands for establishment of full 
sharia courts, and it is feared that the 
insurgents may re-launch violent attacks on 
civilians until they have full judicial control.

“The question of the mode of implementation has 
not yet been decided, because the Taliban want 
their own qazis [sharia judges] and that the 
government appointed ones should quit,” said 
lawyer Khalid Mahmood, who practices in the NWFP.

Mahmood called the judiciary system in Swat 
“collapsed” and echoed the fear that violence 
would spread in the rest of the country.

“They will certainly attack on the neighboring districts,” he said.

Earlier today, close to the Swat Valley in 
Khyber, a suicide bomber demolished a mosque in 
Jamrud, killing at least 48 people and injuring 
more than 150 others during Friday prayers. 
Pakistani security officials reportedly said they 
suspected the attack was retaliation for attempts 
to get NATO supplies into Afghanistan to use 
against Taliban fighters and other Islamist militants.

END


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