DERA ISMAIL KHAN: A sit-in by police in the northwestern Pakistani district of Lakki Marwat entered its third day on Wednesday, with protesters demanding the military’s withdrawal and the transfer of power to civilian law enforcers, as Bajaur cops announced a boycott of polio duty after their colleague was killed earlier today.
The Pakistan army has a heavy presence in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province bordering Afghanistan, where it has been battling militants from Al-Qaeda, Pakistani Taliban and other groups for nearly two decades.
There have been protests in several districts of KP since July, when Pakistan’s cabinet announced that a new military operation would be launched amid a surge in terror attacks across the country. People in the northwestern region have rejected plans for an armed operation and demand that civilian agencies like the provincial police and the counter-terrorism department be better equipped.
“Lakki Marwat police sit-in protest against Pakistani army continues for the third day in intense heat at Taja Chowk,” district police said in a statement to media, saying the Peshawar-Karachi Indus Highway had been completely closed for all types of vehicular traffic for 72 hours.
“Police only have one demand and a one point agenda that the army should withdraw from the district and police should be given back their full powers.”
The sit-in by policemen, who have been joined by representatives of civil society and political parties as well as tribal elders and members of the public, comes days after unidentified gunmen attacked a police van in Lakki Marwat, killing an officer. Two brothers of a serving policeman in in the area were also gunned down last week.
Police in KP’s Bajaur tribal district also decided to protest after losing a colleague who was gunned down in a suspected militant attack targeting a polio vaccination team. The unknown assailants also fatally shot a polio worker while going door to door to administer vaccine to children.
“There will be complete boycott of polio duty,” a video circulating on social media showed a man standing among a group of uniformed personnel as saying. “They [the government and security officials] will give us the killers of Luqman [the police constable killed in the latest attack while performing polio duty].”
“We will question who killed our colleague in broad daylight,” he added.
Pakistan has seen a rise in militant attacks in recent weeks, with many of them taking place in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa where groups like the outlawed Pakistani Taliban, or TTP, have stepped up attacks, daily targeting security forces convoys and check posts, and carrying out targeted killings and kidnappings of law enforcers and government officials.
At least 75 policemen have been killed in ambushes and target killings in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in 2024, according to police data.
The volatile Lakki Marwat district is located on the edge of Pakistan’s restive tribal regions that border Afghanistan, from where Islamabad says militants mainly associated with the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan frequently launch attacks, targeting police and other security forces. Islamabad has even blamed Kabul’s Afghan Taliban rulers of facilitating anti-Pakistan militants. Kabul denies the charges.