As the fate of two Chinese hostages held by militants in South Waziristan hangs in the balance, there was another suicide bombing at a Lahore mosque on Sunday, killing four people.
A day earlier, religious scholar Mufti Jameel Ahmed Khan and one of his associates were gunned down in Karachi by unidentified attackers, who escaped from the scene on their motorbike after committing the murders in broad daylight.
Last week's terrorist attack on a mosque in Sialkot and another one on a religious gathering in Multan resulted in the killing of dozens of people. This is full-throttle terrorism, whose spread the authorities have failed to check.
Instead, Sindh police have reportedly sent written directives to many mosques and imambargahs in the province asking them to have their own private guards or armed volunteers posted on the premises to provide security.
If true, this would mean abdicating the primary function of the police of protecting citizens in all public places. If put into practice, this may also have other more serious repercussions.
For one, who would stop such armed volunteer groups from turning into private militias over a period of time? The very suggestion is absurd and a recipe for disaster. This is against the norms of civil society and must not be allowed to take effect.
Whether in South Waziristan, Punjab or Karachi, the recent acts of terrorism have shown that the government's policy of showing clemency or offering amnesty to the militants is not working.
It is disturbing to note that the commander of the hostage-takers in South Waziristan is a former Guantanamo Bay prisoner. Similarly, merely banning some sectarian organizations has resulted only in their resurfacing under new names.
Those running these organizations have remained as menacing a threat to society as before. It is time all such elements were disarmed and those involved in acts of violence brought to book without any political or other considerations coming in the way.
The government must ensure that proper security is provided to all legal foreigners residing in Pakistan and to the places of worship everywhere. The decision by the Lahore police to deploy 4,500 policemen at a number of city mosques and imambargahs is the right one.
The ban imposed by the interior ministry on unauthorized religious gatherings following the attack on one such congregation in Multan last week must be enforced rigorously throughout the country.
The general public must be made to feel secure while visiting a place of worship, and the responsibility for providing security at public places must rest exclusively with the state's law enforcement agencies.