Hiding behind Pukhtun tribes?
By Afrasiab Khattak
GENERAL Pervez Musharraf in an interview on May 1, with a London-based Pakistani satellite channel said there were indications that Osama bin Laden was alive, and might be hiding in tribal territory on the Pakistan-Afghan border. Musharraf said it was possible Osama could be with a small group of bodyguards, hiding on the Pakistani side or the Afghan side of the rugged border.
This is not for the first time that General Musharraf has pointed his finger at the Federally Administered Tribal Area (Fata) as a possible hideout of Osama and other Al Qaeda operatives. In the past, General Musharraf and some of his other colleagues have dropped broad hints to the effect that Osama and some of his followers might have gone underground in the Pukhtun tribal area. It is rather surprising that they have stuck to this theory, though most of the top Al Qaeda operatives have been arrested during the last one year not in Fata, but far away from it in big cities like Rawalpindi, Lahore, Faisalabad and Karachi.
It is true that many Al-Qaeda followers were arrested in the tribal agencies at a time when they were fleeing out of Afghanistan after the US military operations in Tora Bora, Zhawar and Shahikot. They entered the tribal area because that is the only available route from the aforementioned places for crossing over into Pakistan and moving towards safer places. But there is no question of the numerous Al-Qaeda fugitives hiding in the tribal area. There are very solid reasons for that.
One has to understand the peculiar socio-cultural structures still largely intact in the area. Xenophobia among Pukhtun tribes, like among other tribes elsewhere, is still quite strong.
A non-local and particularly a foreigner is immediately taken notice of and reported to the tribe. The tribesmen observe segregation on the basis of gender very rigidly. A guest, howsoever important he may be, cannot be taken inside the women quarters of a residence. He has to reside in a hujra, the communal guest house of the clan or the extended family, where a number of people belonging to the clan and extended family would shake his hand, ask for his name and the purpose of his visit.
Some proclaimed offenders from the settled districts do take refuge in the tribal area, but it is done publicly and in many cases before a jirga or tribal assembly. The newcomer is introduced to everybody and the clan or family giving refuge to the person stands responsible for his conduct as long as he lives there. It is also important to know that there are no houses for rent in the area. Every one lives along with their kith and kin in a fortress like house that has to be defended by the residents.
Fata is a quite thickly populated area and the geographic location of a tribe or sub-tribe is well known. The tribe has a collective responsibility for its security.
In the case of Osama bin Laden, there are additional reasons to believe that he could not have remained in the tribal area even if he had been initially there. He cannot be unaware of the news about his possible presence in the area that is widely publicized. In all probability, he would have left the area to hide in the big cities that are far safer. The arrest of high-level Al Qaeda men from important urban centres of the country proves this point, if a proof is needed at all. Moreover, most of the tribal area is right on the Afghan border.
It is well known to everyone that the US army is quite active along the border with a lot of aerial surveillance and electronic monitoring. Osama cannot be such a fool as to hang out in such close vicinity of US forces, knowing fully well that they will have little hesitation in crossing the border to get him.
The tribal area was used as a launching pad for fighters against various Afghan regimes, but that was not done secretly. All such operations were launched with not only the consent, but also with the active support of the government. The question is why should General Musharraf and other officials of his government keep harping on this theme when realities on the ground point in the opposite direction? Is it hard intelligence? Most probably not.
In view of the past record of the present government, it is safer to assume that it is making an effort to hide behind the so-called inaccessibility of the tribal area for the failure of its security apparatus in nabbing the most wanted fugitives. The myth of “no man’s land” and the “wild north-west” comes quite handy as a spin and as a diversion when the government fails to muster the required political will for taking the bull of terrorism right by the horns. One can understand the difficulty of the official spin-doctors after the collapse of the Taliban government in Afghanistan. Now they are left only with the Pukhtun tribal areas for dumping all dirty things.
Be that as it may, this particular line of official propaganda has created serious concern among Pukhtun people in general and the residents of Fata in particular. This is because Pukhtuns are still reeling under the impact of an extremely bloody and decapitating polarization created by the prolonged Afghan conflict.
Last week, US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told a press conference in Kabul that most of Afghanistan was calm, but the border area with Pakistan was still dangerous. Not only that. It was only a few months back that a US plane had bombed a building in South Waziristan Agency in what they had called retaliation to an attack on them on the Pakistan-Afghan border.
The possible presence of Osama in the area, in the light of the statements by the highest state functionary, can very well give them ideas for more disastrous bombing in Fata to hunt the most-wanted man of the world down. These are dangerous, but not very unreal prospects. Can one expect some soul-searching on this score?
The writer is chairman of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan.


India-Pakistan: some good news
By A.R. Siddiqi
GOOD news from India-Pakistan is rare; no news, more often than not, is good news. Some good news from the two countries, such as in the past few days, is great news. Missed opportunities and costly errors of judgment of the past must not be allowed to come in the way of a phased and satisfactory fruition of the initiative jointly sponsored by the two prime ministers, Atal Behari Vajpayee and Mir Zafarullah Jamali.
President General Pervez Musharraf stands tall and square behind his prime minister. It was he who, after a crucial meeting on Friday (May 2) at the Army House, made the welcome announcement about the restoration of full diplomatic ties downgraded by India earlier on. Pakistani high commissioner is to be nominated soon to assume his diplomatic burden in New Delhi on a reciprocal basis.
Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee, easily the subcontinent’s most mature statesman in age (78) and experience, has virtually staked his place in history as a successful or failed peace-maker almost without hedging his bets. From Pakistan, both at the level of the head of state and head of government, the response has been equally positive and spontaneous.
This is not to expect either side to compromise, least of all give up its ‘principled’ stand on the ‘core’ issue, Kashmir, the mother of all India-Pakistan conflicts and simmering tensions. The proverbial Paradise on Earth has indeed been the bete noire of India, Pakistan relations. However, now that India has after all agreed to re-open the closed chapter of Kashmir, the move should lead to a fresh re-appraisal closer to ground realities.
It needs to be clearly understood that Mr Vajpayee’s olive branch to Pakistan is not without the birch rod, happily without its bruising roughness. “This round of talks”, he told the Lok Sabha, “will be decisive. And at least for my life-time, this would be the (third) and the last.” The two rounds held earlier were in Lahore (February, 1999), and Agra (June 2001). Mr Vajpayee hoped to ‘leave a legacy of peace’ between the two countries before the end of his tenure. A nobler thought and mission would be hard to come by.
It may be recalled that under Morarji Desai as prime minister and Atal Behari Vajpayee as his foreign minister, India had relatively the best of relations with Pakistan. During their official visit to Pakistan in the early 80s, under martial law, the two dignitaries were received with warmth and cordiality by the president-CMLA, General Muhammad Ziaul Haq.
Prime Minister Desai was awarded Pakistan’s highest civil award, the Nishan-i-Pakistan which he graciously accepted.
Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri, while welcoming the peace initiative of the two prime ministers, has in interviews and statements shown a judicious blend of undisguised optimism tempered with pragmatism. While hoping for the peace initiative to be ‘decisive and conclusive’, he indicated that he would not look for a quick fix. It should give a new impetus to the “slowly improving ties” between the two countries after a long and troubled hiatus.
Of his own credentials as a supporter of India-Pakistan peace, Mr Kasuri went on to recall his own election campaign during which he “never resorted to India-bashing despite the fact that his voters had been frequently victims of Indian artillery barrages.” The Kasur-Bedian sector, south of Lahore was in the midst of some of the heaviest bombardment by Indian artillery during the two wars of 1965 and 1971. While Mr Kasuri called the initiative “a very positive development”, he was rightly critical of the “belligerent” statements of Indian ministers’ denouncing Pakistan for continuing to sponsor ‘cross-border terrorism’ and urging ‘no talks with Pakistan’ until the militants’ traffic stopped. The belligerent tone of the Indian ministers, to Mr Kasuri’s mind, was meant to “mislead their large populations, not very politically conscious and thus very gullible...”
Rather a bizarre statement to make about people exercising their right to vote at regular intervals and elect a government of their own choice, good, bad or indifferent. The Indian people are the mainstay and unfailing pillar of Indian democracy, no matter how ‘gullible.’
What truly matters now is that the peace initiative, still in embryo, must be allowed to develop and grow to full size and strength. A concerted move launched at the highest level, after a prolonged deadlock with its threat of a terrifying two- dimensional (conventional/nuclear) armed conflict, can be stymied or aborted only at the horrific cost of staying still born for the foreseeable future. The process must go on even if the product is not within immediate reach.
Now a word about the purely domestic dimension of the peace process in terms of the impact of the politics of confrontation between the government and the opposition. Tied to the apron strings of Prime Minister Jamali, the process will be practically inconceivable without him and his government. Therefore, a status quo domestically, no matter how smelly and unwelcome, remains the one essential pre-requisite for the full fruition of the peace process.
The writer is a retired brigadier of the Pakistan army.


Public safety commission starts functioning: DATELINE BAHAWALPUR
By Majeed Gill
THE district Public Safety Commission started functioning recently to redress the people’s grievances against the police.
According to the commission chairperson, Mr Mashhood Nasir, within a few days the commission received about 10 complaints, in addition to a case forwarded by the Bahawalpur Bench of the Lahore High Court. Most complaints pertain to the alleged bribery, illegal gratification and misuse of powers by the police.
The charges are being thoroughly investigated by various sub-committees constituted by the commission. After recording of evidence, the chairperson told, the cases could be decided in the light of circumstantial evidence and inspection of the scene of occurrences, if necessary.
However, a case in which the complainant could not prove the charge was dismissed. In a case involving bribery and misuse of powers against an SI and ASI, the complainant has been asked to furnish proof with the commission’s sub-committee. As regards the case sent by the Lahore High Court, Bahawalpur Bench, the complainant has been summoned. He had complained of damages caused during the police raid, without valid orders, on his medical store.
The chairperson opined that complainants would be welcomed provided they reported the matter to the public safety commission. Keeping in view the role of the commission, the district governments and the provincial government along with the police department should create awareness among the people about registration of complaints against police excesses and for this purpose, the government should give wide publicity to the duties of safety commission so that the aggrieved could approach the members of the district safety commission for relief. Currently, few people are aware of the role of safety commissions.
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THE encroachment issue in the city is unresolved for the past many months. With the result that illegal structures and constructions have cropped up along the roads and in the streets of many localities.
In bazaars, many unauthorized extensions of shops have blocked the smooth passage of the people. Shopkeepers have also rented out their front portions to vendors and pushcart owners.
The tehsil administration has not launched any operation against encroachments since long, despite criticism by the civic circles.
The defunct corporation with the assistance of magistrates often conducted operations against this menace. But the tehsil municipal administration hardly takes any action in the absence of such a mechanism. The people are of the view that the tehsil administration, which is a part of the district government, is unable to tackle their civic problems.
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WAPDA Chairman Gen Zulfiqar Ali Khan (retired) at his open kutchery here the other day told the consumers that special attention was being paid to the provision of power connections for tubewells and villages.
According to him, about 1,000 new tubewell connections will be provided during the current year in southern Punjab. He told that in Bahawalpur circle, development works of Rs70 million were completed and 1,900 consumers were provided electricity connections this year.
He added that with the cooperation of the Punjab government, a revolving fund has been created for providing connections to poor and deserving consumers of rural areas. Their charges will be recovered in 12 easy instalments along with the monthly bills.
A number of complaints of corruption, inefficiency and negligence were brought to his notice. A meter inspector was suspended on corruption charges and discourtesy.
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AFTER about 10 years’ hibernation, the revival of the dramatic society of Sadiq Public School, Bahawalpur, was heralded with the staging of three plays, including Shakespeare’s famous tragedy ‘Macbeth’.
The presentation of this piece of classical English literature delighted the select audience, who applauded the participants and their director Mr Nauman Ahmed, head of the English Department. Urdu drama “Bumper Prize” highlighted social evils and the Punjabi play entitled, “Vanjara mera han da”, projected the demerits of dowry in our society.
The guests, drawn from a cross section of society, welcomed the revival of such healthy extra-curricular activity in the school and observed that the new principal, Prof Asif Malik, should promote programmes aimed at character-building of the students.

