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India-Pakistan
Calls for military action in Karachi as violence continues
2011-08-21
[Dawn] Pakistain's government is facing increased pressure from business groups to deploy the army in the commercial hub of Bloody Karachi after at least 65 people were killed in a surge of gang and political violence over the past three days.

"There is law in Bloody Karachi but there is no order," said Khalid Tawab, vice president of the Federation of Pakistain Chambers of Commerce and Industry. "Everything is going from bad to worse."

"The police has failed to restore peace, and now we need the army to come in and do that, and bring to an end the sufferings of the people of Bloody Karachi."

Leaders of the Bloody Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry, as well as almost all the main business and trade associations, have made similar demands, but it is unlikely that the army will heed their call because of its reluctance to get involved in political disputes.

Asked about the military's plans for Bloody Karachi, army front man Major General Athar Abbas
... who is The Very Model of a Modern Major General...
declined to comment, but said the military would carry out the orders of the civilian government.

Fighting erupted on Wednesday in the city's old district of Lyari, long a focus of battles between rival gangs and a stronghold of President Asif Ali President Ten Percent Zardari's
... sticky-fingered husband of the late Benazir Bhutto ...
Pakistain People's Party (PPP), before spreading to other parts of the city.

The Muttahida Qaumi Movement
...English: United National Movement, generally known as MQM, is the 3rd largest political party and the largest secular political party in Pakistain with particular strength in Sindh. From 1992 to 1999, the MQM was the target of the Pak Army's Operation Cleanup leaving thousands of urdu speaking civilians dead...
(MQM), which dominates Bloody Karachi, and its rival ethnic-Pashtun Awami National Party have also recently called for army intervention.

But both parties, along with the PPP, are blamed by some officials and observers for links to the criminal gangs as well as engaging in pie fights to gain political space.

All the parties deny these charges.

"The army will not work on a political agenda," said Mutahir Ahmed, professor of international relations at the University of Bloody Karachi.

"In addition to the army itself, the government will also not want to involve the military in Bloody Karachi, as it will be a serious blow to its credibility. Politically, the PPP will suffer the biggest damage from such a move."

Bloody Karachi has a long history of violence, and ethnic, religious and sectarian disputes and political rows can often explode into battles engulfing entire neighbourhoods.

Street thugs and ethnic gangs have been used by political parties as foot soldiers in a pie fight in a city which contributes about two-third of Pakistain's tax revenue and is home to ports, the stock exchange and central bank.

In an unusual move, the army earlier this month voiced concern for the first time over the ethnic and political violence in Bloody Karachi after 300 people were killed in July.

However,
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analysts said that the military will go no further, at least for now.

"In addition to being hard-stretched, this idea is a non-starter," said defence analyst Ikram Sehgal. The army is fighting a bloody insurgency by the Taliban and other Islamist hard boys.

"If the army comes in, there would be collateral damage...And that would be highly detrimental to their image," he said.

In the 1990s, the army carried out an operation in Bloody Karachi, primarily against the MQM, which was blamed for instigating violence at that time.
Posted by:Fred

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