http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/pakistan/metropolitan/04-peshawar-epicentre-qs-06


Peshawar: Epicentre of the battle against militants 

Wednesday, 09 Dec, 2009 

 
Men gather at the site of a blast in Peshawar, December 5, 2009. - Reuters 

PESHAWAR: Provincial minister Amir Haider Khan Hoti spends much of his time 
handing out envelopes containing cheques. Some people still suffering from 
shrapnel wounds limped to collect them.

Others wept and hugged him after the names of their deceased sons were read out 
as dozens of others waited for their turn.

It has become a ritual in Peshawar, where those devastated by bombings - the 
worst in the country in a militant campaign against the government - receive 
compensation from authorities.

'We are facing an insurgency at its best. It's natural that I have to give 
maximum time for these activities,' Hoti, Chief Minister for the North West 
Frontier Province (NWFP), told Reuters. 

'If we lose this war. God forbid. This country will go to the dogs.'

Peshawar and its surrounding areas near the border with Afghanistan are the 
epicentre of the battle against militants, who recently raised security alarm 
bells with a suicide bombing and gun attack near Pakistan's military 
headquarters, 30 minutes from the capital.

Failure to contain violence in Peshawar could mean more operations like that 
one because it would make it easier for militants to get to large cities and 
strategic areas, spreading more chaos and fear in the country.

Authorities seem well aware of that, judging by Peshawar's siege atmosphere. 

Military and state police check vehicles for weapons and bombs at checkpoints. 
Behind them soldiers with machineguns keep an eye out for suicide bombers.
Sandbags have been placed in front of vital businesses. School children are 
taught drills to follow in the event of a bomb.

Dashed hopes, fear of death

But tight security may only produce short-term success in Peshawar, a run-down 
city 105 miles northwest of Islamabad.

Militants often exploit poverty and unemployment, enticing impressionable young 
men with promises of glorious holy war.

Winning long-term trust in the state is half the battle.

'It's not only the military operations. Military operations are to be followed 
by relief, reconstruction and rehabilitation,' said Hoti.

'The space that was exploited by these (militant) elements. We need to fill 
that space. Administrative issues, political issues. The social sector. 
Poverty. You name it. A system of good governance.'

Two students in a market area reinforced that view. Taliban fighters in their 
village paid other young men 'good' money to join the group and take up arms, 
they said. At first Peshawar had offered high hopes. Until the bombings killed 
more and more people, hundreds since October.

They spend their time hanging out in a hunting gun shop and making small talk 
with its owner. The ripple economic effects of violence have cut his sales to a 
rifle a month.

'I am afraid I am going to die,' said one of the students, Azhar Farooq.

During the 1980s, Peshawar became a den of spies and jihadis when the United 
States and Saudi Arabia covertly funded a mujahideen guerrilla war to expel 
Soviet troops from Afghanistan. Pakistan also supported the effort. It's a 
bitter irony.

Nowadays, Peshawar police chief Liaquat Ali Khan sits at his desk explaining 
how Taliban, al-Qaeda and criminal elements are coordinating in a shadowy 
network trying to terrorise the city.

Khan is a confident hard-nosed man who says he has no doubts the police will 
emerge victorious, perhaps in a few months. But his description of the police 
force's resources, and the methods of the enemy, highlighted the magnitude of 
the task.

The police force needs highly sophisticated bomb and weapon detectors. They 
only own a handful to improve the safety of a city of 1.5 million.

Militants, on the other hand, are brainwashing boys as young as 14, or 
threatening to blow up their homes and families, to force them to become 
suicide bombers, said Khan.

For now, he must rely on police officers like Inspector Khaista Khan, whose 
picture hangs on a wall outside the police chief's office. On Saturday, he was 
killed after pouncing on a suicide bomber outside a Peshawar court who killed 
nine people.
The act may have prevented a much higher death toll.

'A suicide bomber comes and the policeman goes and hugs him and takes all the 
blast for himself and protects the public. I think this needs motivation, 
devotion to duty and courage,' Khan told Reuters. 'This you can only find in 
the Peshawar police.'



Tags: Peshawar blast,Peshawar,Peshawar Taliban,Peshawar attacks 

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