Pakistani groups note drop in violence, credit the military

Say that for sustained peace, sectarian and anti-Indian extremists based in the Punjab province must be disbanded.

January 09, 2017 05:15 pm | Updated 05:24 pm IST - ISLAMABAD:

Hafiz Saeed, leader of the Lashkar-e-Taiba and Mumbai attack mastermind, roams freely in Pakistan spewing venom on India and in this September 30, 2016 photo, he is seen at a Lahore rally where he vowed to avenge the killings of “innocent Kashmiris.” Two Pakistan research groups have said that 2016 was a comparatively peaceful year for the country and that for the calm to continue, anti-Indian and sectarian groups that abound in the Punjab province must be wiped out.

Hafiz Saeed, leader of the Lashkar-e-Taiba and Mumbai attack mastermind, roams freely in Pakistan spewing venom on India and in this September 30, 2016 photo, he is seen at a Lahore rally where he vowed to avenge the killings of “innocent Kashmiris.” Two Pakistan research groups have said that 2016 was a comparatively peaceful year for the country and that for the calm to continue, anti-Indian and sectarian groups that abound in the Punjab province must be wiped out.

Two Pakistani research groups have noted that the country saw a significant drop in militant violence last year, crediting the military for the decrease in attacks.

The two Islamabad-based groups said that large-scale military operations in the lawless tribal regions bordering Afghanistan, in the chaotic port city of Karachi and the sparsely populated Balochistan province were behind the drop. But for the trend to continue, they say, authorities need to disband sectarian and anti-Indian extremists based in the populous Punjab province.

The findings, which are based on the groups’ records, were released last week and on Sunday.

One of the groups, the Center for Research and Security Studies, said there was a 45 per cent drop in violence-related deaths in 2016, compared to the previous year. The Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies, which tallies violent incidents, registered a 28 per cent drop in attacks in 2016, compared to 2015.

‘Be a friendly Pakistan’

Still, both organizations tempered the findings by warning that the trend could be halted unless militant groups are disbanded and called for improving relations with neighboring India and Afghanistan.

Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif echoed some of those sentiments last week, when he told a writers’ conference that Pakistan needs to create an effective narrative that promotes tolerance.

“We are forgetting how to speak of mutual love, integrity, compassion and empathy,” he said. His government introduced legislation in 2016 outlawing hate speech and denying clerics from rival Islamic sects the right to use their loudspeakers at their mosques.

Also, lawmakers from his own Pakistan Muslim League have been seen on campaign platforms with members of the outlawed Sunni extremist group Sipah-e-Sahabah, which has links to the banned Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, another violent Sunni extremist group that has been blamed for several attacks last year, particularly in south-western Balochistan.

“A government that is going into an election next year doesn’t want to lose votes,” said Imtiaz Gul, executive director of the Center for Research and Security Studies, which authored one of the reports. “The banned outfits have madrassas that still operate, they have sympathies and influence.”

‘Do away with militant groups’

A mostly Sunni Muslim country, Pakistan has for years been convulsed by brutal sectarian violence that has killed thousands. Most of the victims have been minority Shiite Muslims.

Asadullah Khan, an analyst with Pakistan’s Institute of Strategic Studies, has says that “it isn’t enough to ban” militant groups, which then surface under a new name. “We have to get rid of them altogether,” Khan said.

Prominent on the militant landscape dotting Pakistan are also the Afghan Taliban, Pakistan’s own Taliban group and its splinters, as well as the feared Haqqani network. Then there are several anti-Indian groups, labelled terrorists by the United States and India such as Lashkar-e-Taiba, which was banned but remerged as Jamaat-ud-Daawa and Jaish-e-Mohammed.

Wars over the K-word

Pakistan has fought three wars with archrival India, most often over the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir.

“Pakistan’s reluctance to abandon militant groups altogether is inextricably linked to its perceived security concerns,” said Marvin Weinbaum of the Middle East Institute in Washington

“They remain viewed as valued proxies in a Pakistani strategic security calculus focused on Kashmir and the perceived threats posed by an India-aligned Afghanistan,” said Weinbaum.

Afghanistan and the U.S. regularly demand that Pakistan put an end to cross-border incursion by Afghan militants, though the 2,400 kilometer-boundary is in itself is a source of dispute between Pakistan and Afghanistan. Islamabad says that Kabul has shunned repeated Pakistani attempts to resolve the border issue.

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