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Afghanistan/South Asia
Straw Visits Madrassa
2004-03-06
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw toured an Islamic religious school in northwestern Pakistan yesterday, in an unusual trip to review government reforms at institutions long seen as breeding grounds for terrorists. Dozens of police lined the streets and sharpshooters prowled rooftops during Straw’s morning visit to Peshawar, 290 km from the capital, Islamabad. The city is the capital of a province run by a coalition of radical Islamic parties, and the tour is meant to foster better ties between the West and Islamic groups.
"Better" being a relative term...
Eighty students in white caps and turbans stood in two rows to formally receive Britain’s top diplomat, who is making his first trip to Pakistan in 15 months — a period during which Pakistan has stepped up efforts to hunt down Al-Qaeda and Taleban fugitives in its tribal regions bordering Afghanistan. Straw praised Pakistan for its efforts, describing terrorism as a scourge that hurts everyone regardless of where they live. “In the fight against terrorism, we are all on the front lines,” he said in a speech at a local university.
Unfortunately, there are two sides to a line...
Pakistan’s army has deployed tens of thousands of troops and stepped up security in the regions near the Afghan border in an unprecedented drive to prevent terrorists from finding a safe haven on Pakistani soil. The operations are resented by some among the primitive fiercely independent tribal population — particularly after Pakistani forces opened fire on civilians traveling in a minibus that failed to stop at a checkpoint last weekend, killing 13 people. Straw backed Pakistan’s military operations in the volatile tribal regions — which are also a suspected hiding place for Osama Bin Laden. He declined to comment on the hunt for Bin Laden.
"Unlike some people, we try not to brag before we've accomplished something. Sometimes we don't brag afterward, too."
Many of Pakistan’s religious schools, known as madrassas, are considered key training grounds for militants, and some — particularly those around Peshawar — produced scholars who later became central figures in the Taliban movement. Straw tried yesterday to focus on promoting religious harmony. He noted that Muslims were predominantly the victims of suicide attacks earlier this week in Pakistan and Iraq. “There could be no clearer proof that this terrorism has nothing to do with alleged division between Islam and the West,” he said. “Terrorists attack defenseless victims regardless of faith or nation.”
Except that the victims were Shiites. Qazi, Fazl, and Sami would be happy to see them declared non-Muslims, and hence fair game, like the Qadianis.
The students, for their part, seemed eager to show Straw their school and their educational system — particularly given the fact that foreign observers come rarely. “There is a lot of confusion and misunderstanding about Islam and the madrassas in the world and particularly in the West,” said one graduate student, Nawaz Ali. “It’s an opportunity for us that such a prominent Western personality is visiting us.”
"We should kill him!"
Under pressure to combat terrorism, Pakistan has strengthened its control of the country’s 8,000 Islamic schools, requiring them to register before receiving public funds. If they fail to register, the schools could risk being shut down and fined.
But it's not much of a risk.
Posted by:Fred

#2  Straw’s morning visit to Peshawar
I'm a waitin for satisfaction!
Posted by: Ernest T. Bass   2004-3-6 1:27:18 PM  

#1  He cannot even tell the difference between a chapter 6 and chapter 7 Security Council resolution.
So what is he going to understand about those reforms?
Posted by: Cynic   2004-3-6 12:13:42 PM  

00:00