didn’t do much to stop the rise of militants, and rather stood accused of providing space to several of them.
As if the FCR was not enough, across all of Fata and the Provincially Administered Tribal Areas (Pata), the military has, since 2011, acquired considerable powers, including those of detaining anyone on security grounds. The controversial Action in Aid of Civil Power (AACP) even provides that a statement or deposition by any armed forces member shall be sufficient for convicting the accused. A tribal politician, in an interview to a human rights organisation, likened the regulation to ‘martial law’ over Fata.
Yet, three years down the road, Fata-linked militants continued with their attacks across the country.
The previous director general of ISPR, the military’s media arm, rather admitted that because of dithering by the ex-army chief to go after militants in North Waziristan in 2011, the militants strengthened their foothold there and increased their contacts in three years in that agency, where “all kinds of militants” were gathered.
Key planners of the Peshawar school attack too made their way in the tribal territory.
To be sure, although Fata is tagged as a hub of militancy, the fatherly figures of several sorts of militancy rather reside in Punjab. Punjab-based militants have attacked deep in the country and exported hatred to its other parts. Any anti-militant response would be useless if Punjab is left out.
But, when it comes to military courts, some commentators argue that the scope better be restricted to Fata ‘type’ militancy or to those who have taken ‘arms against the state’ in the name of religion. The focus once again will be on the tribal areas.
Admittedly, even the anti-state militants in Punjab, despite whipping up hatred against all, were not able to convert any territory of their province into a terror-training emirate, as their partners in Fata did.
These days, some people claim that Pakistan cannot turn into another Iraq or Libya, where private militias have risen to power amid declining state institutions. What is ignored is how before extremist entities like Isis were formed in the Middle East, equally brutal militants secured themselves in Fata, in part because its existing ‘swift’ institutions couldn’t resist the militant onslaught.
Strikingly, in some tribal and bordering settled villages, locals have been left to defend themselves against the Taliban. Veteran journalist Rahimullah Yusufzai recently wrote how a ragtag of local peace militia in a village in Peshawar, long fought the group of Umar, the mastermind of Peshawar attack.
With proper law-and-order mechanisms in Fata as are present in the settled areas, the territory would not have slipped so easily into chaos.
Many stakeholders, including political parties, the judiciary and KP police have been pushing for integrating Fata into Pakistan. Ironically, all these players are often blamed these days for not rising up to check militancy. Yet, attempts to make Fata similar to the rest of the country continue to be toned down, some say in the name of security.
For decades, Fata served as a springboard for undertaking reckless regional dives. Its discriminatory status facilitated in shrouding from the public eye what was happening there. As long as this status remains, doubts will linger over the new national resolve claiming the country has learnt from the futility of past ambitions. Let us hope that the freshly-agreed to national consensus removes these doubts.
The writer is a researcher on politics and security in Pakistan.
Email: ismkhan84@gmail.com
There are over 11 million Pakistanis settled abroad, out of which around six million work in Gulf and Middle East
This year alone, US Treasury would have to roll-over $10 to $14 trillion in maturing short-term debt
Tear gas no longer marks just protest sites; it paints entire cities as battlegrounds but then again, PTI did it first
Political structures and governance systems have been central to economic and social development
It is confirmed now 40 Pakistanis had died after boat of migrants had capsized in sea near Greece
Many people believe that in future, AI will play an even more significant role in their lives