Attack fuels Taleban comeback fears in Pakistan’s Swat valley
The 2009 air and ground offensive that appeared to have crushed a two-year Taleban insurgency in the scenic northwestern district was widely credited as Pakistan’s most successful operation to date against militants. It was a defining moment when almost the entire country united behind the army as it killed, arrested and expelled hundreds of Taleban fighters who had seized control of the former tourist destination once frequented by Westerners.
But the main town in Swat was plunged back into shock and grief last Thursday when bombers killed 22 people and wounded more than 80 as a Muslim cleric addressed a meeting of the Tableeghi Jamaat preachers’ movement in Mingora.
It was an unprecedented attack on an uncontroversial and widely respected religious organization with no political agenda.
“People are scared. They even feel unsafe in mosques. This blast has brought severe fear. Now people prefer to pray at home,” said Mohammad Zaman, 57, who was visiting a relative wounded in the attack. Although Pakistan’s main umbrella Taleban faction denied carrying out the bombing, there is no doubt in the minds of local residents and of the security services that elements of the Taleban are trying to come back.
“They destroyed Swat and now they are targeting us again, but I ask them: Why? What is our crime?” Zaman said. It took hours for the authorities to confirm that the explosion, the deadliest in Swat since the Taleban were defeated, was caused by a bomb and not a gas canister. Three days later, there were still bloodstains on the floor of the center and the acrid smell of explosives hung in the air.
There are growing fears that the Swat attack is part of a renewed campaign of violence by militants, timed to coincide with the lead-up to general elections due by mid-May.
Pakistan maintains that the leader of the original Swat uprising, Maulana Fazlullah and a band of loyalists escaped into eastern Afghanistan, from where they have staged cross-border attacks.
First there were raids into the neighboring Pakistani district of Dir, and then last year targeted killings of anti-militancy campaigners resumed in Swat. In October 15-year-old Malala, a campaigner for girls’ education, was shot in the head on a school bus in an attack claimed by the Taleban. There may be no militants on the streets, as there were four years ago, but a security official confirmed to AFP that they have started to sneak back.
“They have no visible presence but some support in the society, there are some silent sympathizers as they have in other parts of Pakistan,” he said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information. The center in Mingora was a soft target. Preachers said they never imagined they would be a target, so there were no body searches and no searches of bags.
Intelligence officials suspect the bomb may have been hidden in a sleeping bag, and detonated either by a timer or remote control.
“We have foiled several of their attempts. It is a cat and mouse situation. The attack on Malala, targeted killings and the latest blast are part of this game,” the security official said. Life in Mingora had the usual hustle and bustle at the weekend. The markets were crowded, restaurants jam-packed and roads clogged with heavy traffic.
But there are new checkpoints in the suburbs. Soldiers wearing bullet-proof jackets and standing next to machine guns mounted on pick-up trucks search vehicles by hand and with scanners.
“My wife told me not to go to the mosque, because she fears the Taleban will bomb us again,” said Fazal Khan, a preacher in the Rahim Abad neighborhood. “I’m still going for prayers five times a day, but frankly I feel scared.” A police officer said that several suspects had been arrested for the Mingora attack, but as with Malala’s shooting, there is no evidence to charge anyone.
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