The Swat Crisis - News, Articles, Opinions

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Pakistani army flattening villages as it battles Taliban*
By Saeed Shah | McClatchy Newspapers *

CHINGLAI, Pakistan — The Pakistani army’s assault against Islamic militants in Buner, in northwest Pakistan, is flattening villages, killing civilians and sending thousands of farmers and villagers fleeing from their homes, residents escaping the fighting said Monday.

“We didn’t see any Taliban; they are up in the mountains, yet the army flattens our villages,” Zaroon Mohammad, 45, told McClatchy as he walked with about a dozen scrawny cattle and the male members of his family in the relative safety of Chinglai village in southern Buner. “Our house has been badly damaged. These cows are now our total possessions.”

Mohammad’s and other residents’ accounts of the fighting contradict those from the Pakistani military and suggest that the government of President Asif Ali Zardari is rapidly losing the support of those it had set out to protect.

The heavy-handed tactics are ringing alarm bells in Washington, where the Obama administration is struggling to devise a strategy to halt the militants’ advances. Officials Monday talked about the need to train the Pakistani military, which has long been fixated on fighting armored battles with India, in counterinsurgency warfare, but it may be too late for that.

Navy Adm. Michael Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters Monday that the Pakistani army in recent years has undertaken “bursts of fighting and engagement” fighting insurgents, but that its operations were “not sustained” by follow-up measures.

The army is now using force, but it also must hold and rebuild the area it conquers, he said. “There’s a military piece” to the operation, he said, “but there also needs to be a hold and build aspect of it.”

Another U.S. official, who closely tracks Pakistan developments, said the Pakistan army is “just destroying stuff. They have zero ability to deliver (aid) services.”

“They hold villages completely accountable for the actions of a few, and that kind of operation produces a lot of (internally displaced persons) and a lot of angst,” said a senior defense official. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

In Buner, the Pakistani military appears to be losing public support in a stridently anti-Taliban district whose residents had raised their own militia to defend themselves against the militants, who last month seized control of the district about 60 miles from Islamabad, the capital.

Mohammad, who’d walked for two days with his cattle to escape the offensive against the Taliban, and other farmers accused the military of using poorly directed artillery and air power to pound civilian areas.

“They shouldn’t use the army in this (indiscriminate) way. They should be targeted at the Taliban,” said Saed Afsar Khan, who was leaving Buner with 18 members of his family and two cows. He estimated that the army had destroyed 80 of the 400 houses in his village of Kawga, near the key battlefield of Ambela.

“I don’t think they’ve killed even one Taliban,” he said. “Only ordinary people.”

As the fighting raged in Buner, a bigger battle appears likely to erupt in neighboring Swat. Late Monday, fierce gun battles broke out between the army and Taliban in the streets of Mingora, the district’s main town, and a controversial three-month-old peace deal between the government and the Taliban in Swat is disintegrating.

The Taliban were reported to have surrounded 46 police officers at the local electrical grid station. Earlier in the day, they ambushed a military convoy in Swat, killing one soldier and wounding two others.

The Pakistani army waited some 25 days after the Taliban stormed into Buner from Swat before launching their response, which television pictures show involves tanks and helicopter gunships.

“Why did they not nip the evil in the bud? This is criminal negligence,” said Sahibzada, a college teacher, who goes by one name, in Palodand village, just south of Buner, where he helps organize relief to those fleeing from the fighting.

“They have caused huge financial losses for those who’ve been forced to flee and caused hatred among those people for their government.”

Locals said that a key grievance was an order given by the government commissioner for the Malakand area, which includes Buner, to disband the anti-Taliban militia soon after the insurgents entered Buner.

The delay in moving the armed forces against the extremists in Buner may have allowed them to entrench themselves and mass sufficient weapons and men to put up stiff resistance. The Taliban have managed to take hostage some 2,000 villagers in the Pir Baba area in the north of Buner, the army confirmed Monday.

The Pakistan army wouldn’t confirm civilian casualties or damage to civilian villages.

“There are no reports I have of any civilian casualties,” said Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas, the army’s chief spokesman. “Or any collateral damage. We have made maximum efforts to avoid it.”

One reason why civilian casualties are likely is that government officials gave no instructions to ordinary people about how to leave the district, and many were confused about the timing of the curfew, those fleeing said. A cause of further frustration was that little or no preparation was made to accommodate those who’d inevitably be displaced by the fighting.

In southern Buner, in the Khudokhel area, on the road out to the nearest town of Swabi, there was no sign of any government-sponsored relief effort. Residents of villages along the road turned out instead, offering food and drink to weary travelers, and help with transportation onward. Those with spare rooms or buildings offered them to the displaced. Villagers in Chinglai, about an hour’s drive into Buner from Swabi, are housing 20 families.

There are no reliable figures so far for how many people have fled Buner. Evacuees describe the district, which had a population of some 500,000, as having practically been emptied.

According to the al Khidmat Foundation, an Islamic charity, more than 150,000 people have taken the road south to Swabi alone. The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, the refugee arm of the United Nations, has registered around 18,000 people, but counting is tricky because almost none of the displaced have gone into the camps that are being set up for them outside Buner.

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Fleeing Swatis describe horrific scenes

http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/c8f6e7004e0142088101a9bd6173a218/swat_family_325.jpg?MOD=AJPERES

A displaced family from Swat valley arrives at a make shift camp in Swabi.—AFP
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PESHAWAR: Shop owner Saeed Khan has already buried one child killed in fighting between the Taliban and government forces in northwest Pakistan. He cannot bear to lose another, AFP reports.
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So the 50-year-old bundled his wife, son and daughter onto a bus in the Taliban-infested town of Mingora in the Swat valley and hurried to the city of Peshawar, hoping for a future free from further bloodshed.

‘I lost my son, who was a police officer in Swat, in a suicide attack in Mingora early this year. I buried him in front of my house,’ Khan told AFP, tears rolling down his cheeks.

‘I don’t want to dig graves for my daughter and son in Mingora. That is why I left the area… His death broke me. Tell me where should I go and from whom should I seek justice?’

Local officials say more than 40,000 men, women and children have packed up and fled Mingora since Tuesday, fearing that Pakistan’s military could unleash a fresh ground and air assault against Taliban fighters.

The bedraggled refugees, some leading goats and cattle through the streets, are seeking safety for their loved ones, as the Taliban claimed to control 90 per cent of the former ski resort and tourist getaway, once favoured by Westerners.

‘I am immediately leaving the city with my wife, mother and four kids,’ said taxi driver Ali Rehman, 46.

‘I don’t really know my destination and destiny. My family and I need protection.’

At the bus stop in Peshawar — the capital of the North West Frontier Province — exhausted and anxious people told stories of horror as they poured out of vehicles carrying old bags, blankets and bundles of clothes.

Zarina Begum, 40, pleaded for help as she staggered off a bus.

‘A mortar hit my house and as a result, I lost one of my eyes. Please take me to hospital, I want medical treatment,’ Zarina begged.

‘They (Taliban) killed my husband, they slit his throat after accusing him of spying… I escaped Swat because I don’t want my son to be killed under the same circumstances. I don’t want to receive his decapitated body.’

The government had hoped that a peace deal agree in February would placate hardliners trying to impose a repressive brand of Islam, but instead the deal appears to be in tatters.

Clashes have flared in recent days throughout Swat, where wealthy Pakistanis and foreigners used to enjoy the breathtaking mountain scenery from plush hilltop hideaways, or cruise down the ski slopes.

Now, gunfire rings out in Mingora, where armed Taliban patrol the streets.

‘I’m really scared of going to Swat. Whenever I see Taliban, they look like vampires,’ said 25-year-old shop keeper Salman Mujtaba, who lost family members in a suicide attack near Mingora.

‘I will never ever go back to Swat. It has lost its beauty.’

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‘2,000 people being used by Taliban as human shields’](http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/pakistan/09-10-militants-3-soldiers-killed-on-day-six-of-buner-operation-szh--01)

ISLAMABAD: Militants beheaded two soldiers they had earlier captured in Khawazkhela area of Swat ‘against all norms of religious teachings and human ethics’.

According to a press release issued by the Inter-Services Public Relations on Monday, security forces were still exercising restraint because of the peace agreement but militants’ high-handedness was continuing.

It said that the militants, in gross violation of the peace accord, were marching on the roads of Mingora city and in other areas, threatening innocent people and the civil administration.

The ISPR said that in Buner militants were using 2,000 innocent people as human shields in view of the imminent cleansing of Pir Baba by security forces.

Early on Monday morning, the militants attacked a security convoy in Barrikot. An officer was killed and two soldiers were injured in the ensuing exchange of fire.

Militants raided a security checkpost at Shangla top and killed one soldier. Security forces also came under attack at Maidan and three militants were killed in an exchange of fire.

A vacant police checkpost at Yakhtangi in Shangla was destroyed by the militants who also set on fire three civilian trucks in Biladram area of Chamtalai.

The militants torched the house of a DSP in Kumber (Maidan) and looted the house of a UC Nazim. They kidnapped a few civilians from Kot Haya Sarai area in Maidan.

According to ISPR chief Major General Athar Abbas, the armed forces were exercising maximum restraint and still wanted the issue to be resolved without bloodshed. He, however, said the militants were blatantly violating the peace agreement.

He said the operation in Swat had been suspended to give peace efforts a chance. It is for the government to decide whether or not a military operation should be launched in Swat again.

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More than one million flee Pakistan fighting, says UN*
The United Nations has said that more than a million people have fled fighting in northern Pakistan as the government struggles to deal with an exodus of refugees*
By Isambard Wilkinson in Islamabad
Last Updated: 1:04PM BST 08 May 2009

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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/telegraph/multimedia/archive/01399/waiting_1399045c.jpg

A spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees says the fighting between Pakistani security forces and the Taliban has led to massive displacement in the area.

At least half a million people have fled fighting in Swat Valley, where a peace deal broke down earlier this week, bringing the total displaced in recent months to 1 million.

A UNHCR spokesman said that up to 200,000 people have arrived in safe areas in the past few days. Another 300,000 are on the move or are about to flee.

Military operations are taking place in three neighbouring districts, Swat, Dir and Buner, which stretch over some 400 square miles.

Pakistani aircraft continued to bomb Taliban positions in the militants’ bastion in Swat valley bastion today, a day after the prime minister ordered the military to “eliminate terrorists”.

President Asif Ali Zardari, in Washington for talks aimed at quelling the chronic unrest that has alarmed the United States, vowed military operations would last until “normalcy” had returned to Swat.

Authorities agreed in February to a Taliban demand for the introduction of Islamic sharia law in the valley but the militants refused to disarm, and pushed out of Swat closer to the capital.

Helicopter gunships, fighters and troops were all involved in operations in Swat, and up to 12 militants were killed after as many as 55 were killed the previous day, said Major Nasir Khan, a military spokesman in Swat.

Salman Khan, speaking from Saidu Sharif, neighbouring Swat’s capital, Mingora, said two children were killed and five others wounded when two mortar shells hit a house in his neighbourhood.

Tens of thousands of civilians have fled the fighting this week. The International Committee of the Red Cross said a humanitarian crisis was intensifying.

Desperate Swat residents appealed for a pause in the fighting so they could escape, saying the Taliban were not allowing them to leave, perhaps because they want to use them as “human shields” and make the army unwilling to use force.

“We want to leave the city, but we cannot go out because of the fighting,” said one resident, Hidayat Ullah. “We will be killed, our children will be killed, our women will be killed and these Taliban will escape.”

“Kill terrorists, but don’t harm us,” he pleaded.

Although many Pakistanis have had doubts about the need to fight the militants, the mood among at least some seemed to be shifting.

“If the government is serious in eliminating militants from Swat then we will support the military operation,” said Khalid Khan, a social worker and resident of the Dheri Baba area in Swat.

However Pakistani forces came under intense fire from militants, mostly young men who are highly motivated ideologically and frequently better paid than soldiers.

A teacher joining the streams of refugees fleeing Mingora said it was completely under Taliban control.

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Swat schoolgirl’s harrowing escape

**Fighting between the Pakistani army and Taleban militants in the country’s north-western Swat valley has forced thousands to flee. Among them is a seventh grade schoolgirl who writes a diary for the BBC under the name Gul Makai. Here, she relates her ordeal to the BBC Urdu Service correspondent in Peshawar, Abdul Hayee Kakar.
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I have not just left Swat behind, but my identity and my life as well.

It was [last] Tuesday night when we heard the sound of heavy firing on all sides. We all got down on the floor.

We found out the exchange was between the Taleban and the army.

Our house is located near the circuit house which also serves as the main army headquarters in the area. Whenever there is fighting there, our home inevitably gets hit.

My family decided to leave Swat the very next day. We gathered the supplies for the trip.

During this time, news arrived that a curfew had been imposed in Mingora. We were trapped for three days.

Finally, when the curfew was relaxed, we put our things in the car and drove out of the city.

I was very sad because I had to leave my school bag, with all my books, behind.

“ My sympathies are neither with the Taleban nor the army - both have been cruel to us ”

I recited verses from the Koran and breathed over it, so that it would be safe in the fighting between the army and the Taleban.

A huge crowd - like a flood of people - was moving about on the roads. Some were barefoot, others without a dupatta [a scarf women use]. Some were carrying bundles, others were empty-handed.

We had thought at first that our situation was dire, but we were thankful after seeing the scene on the roads.

I saw people who did not have money to buy a ticket out of Mingora.

‘Traffic Taleban’

While leaving Mingora, I saw the Taleban in the Qamber area of the city.

They were telling people to drive in a straight line. The people would respond immediately to the Taleban commands.

My friend and I named these Taleban the “Traffic Taleban”.

During the journey, my brother was very angry as he had to leave his chickens behind. He had insisted on bringing them along, but mother said they would die on the way.

We reached Nowshera through Peshawar, and then drove through Mansehra to reach Bisham. At Bisham, the army stopped us from going further.

My grandmother was very ill and crying from the pain. The army finally allowed us to go on after much pleading.

We left the area on foot, and after travelling for a while, we were able to get a bus. We now set off for Shangla.

‘Bullet in the stomach’

We are in Shangla at the moment, but when we hear about the condition of the people in the camps, we thank God that we are living so comfortably.

I am sure that the war cannot continue forever and someday I will be able to go back and reclaim my life and my identity.

My sympathies are neither with the Taleban nor the army. Both have been cruel to us.

The Taleban have destroyed us and the army is murdering our people.

When we were leaving Mingora, one of my relatives received a bullet in the stomach when she was herding her children into the kitchen to protect them from the firing.

My cousin told me that the Taleban tried to prevent burka-clad women from going into the bus station by pushing them. Many fell to the ground.

The Taleban should now stop doing this because after the implementation of Sharia their demands have been met. Why are they doing this now?