With the return last Sunday of 364 Pakistani prisoners of war held in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban regime in November 2001, a sordid chapter in our recent history has come to a close.
The prisoners were accused of having fought in the Afghan civil war alongside the Taliban and Arab fighters, supposedly led by Osama bin Laden, against the Northern Alliance forces.
They were held in prison in Pul-i-Charkhi in north-western Afghanistan after the Taliban had fled, abandoning them to be killed or captured by the Northern Alliance forces as the northern cities of Mazar-i-Sharif and Kunduz fell. Many more died in battle at the hands of their adversaries or succumbed to torture while in enemy custody.
A number of such prisoners were handed over to the US officials in Afghanistan who transported them to the Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba. The prisoners' travail finally came to an end last week when the Afghan authorities gave them a clean chit, following months of efforts by Pakistan.
There are a few lessons to be learnt from the sorry episode, as Pakistani officials debrief the released prisoners before allowing them to go home. Most of the returning young men were recruited to wage jihad in Afghanistan by madressahs run by Taliban sympathizers here, while government agencies either encouraged their activities or turned a blind eye to the indoctrinating process.
At the end of the day, these innocent citizens have had to endure immense pain and suffering for no worthy cause or fault of theirs. All this, while the masterminds behind the saga - the military trainers and the religious seminary recruiters - have managed to keep themselves out of harm's way.
It is partly for this reason that the battle for extremist supremacy has now shifted to Pakistan, with yet more young men being used as cannon fodder. The jihad-loyalists' operations in South Waziristan and acts of terrorism elsewhere in the country are the obvious fallout of this ruinous strategy. Unless these elements are unmasked and brought to book, our war on terror will remain a long and a half-hearted one.
Monitoring blood banks
Blood banks in Karachi that have few qualms about storing expired and unscreened blood products will be alarmed by the move of local health authorities to seal six errant units found guilty of indulging in unsafe practices prohibited by the law.
The Sindh Blood Transfusion Authority (SBTA) has done well to make it clear that it will not allow these units to play with the lives of patients in need of transfusion. It has sent a strong message to other blood banks, registered or otherwise, that it will not condone any violation of safe blood laws.
However, given the grave implications that the transfusion of contaminated blood has for health - as the rising number of patients with blood-borne diseases like hepatitis C indicate - one hopes that instead of conducting surprise raids, SBTA will keep a more regular check on the practices of these units.
For, it is the absence of a strict and constant vigil by health authorities that has provided many of Karachi's more than 100 blood banks with a licence to carry on business solely on the basis of profit - with little care about the quality of the products.
Greater efforts at encouraging a culture of voluntary blood donations and raising public awareness on the subject are also required. Few patients are informed about the identity of the donor.
They have no way of knowing the state of health of the blood-giver, who may well be a drug addict with a history of sharing needles, thus making him a potential carrier of lethal germs.
Unless patients or their doctors demand proof of the safety of the blood to be transfused, blood banks may tend to be careless, even if the SBTA keeps an eye on their operations. Periodic public campaigns must, therefore, go hand in hand with the regular monitoring of blood banks.