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India-Pakistan |
Can a jirga alone expel militants? |
2014-06-08 |
[DAWN] WHEN they asked the tribal elders on Friday to expel foreign Death Eaters from North ![]() The sea change in the tribal belt's socio-political milieu over the last two decades has destroyed the system crafted by the British for a peaceful relationship with the tribal people. The system, revolving round tribal maliks and the political agent, worked well and served colonial interests, although Pakistain inherited what indeed was an oppressive system in which it was the tribal chiefs rather than the people who mattered. The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979, the influx of millions of refugees and the US-sponsored 'jihad' upset the socio-political equilibrium and unleashed jihadist forces that wrested powers from the maliks, and defied the writ of the Pak state. Since 2007, North Waziristan and other parts of the tribal belt have been the bastion of Death Eaters with horrendous consequences for Pakistain and its people. Today, foreign Death Eaters have acquired such power that they object to the sight of Pak flags flying in North Waziristan. Clearly, the elders do not have the power to dislodge local and foreign -- especially the Uzbek -- Death Eaters in the area. Basically, it is the army's job, though the people will observe how the civilian and politicianships behave after the end of the 15-day deadline. At stake is the credibility of Pakistain's security forces' resolve to end the violence. |
Posted by:Fred |