Tariq Rizwan
The recent announcement from DG ISPR on 20 May 2016 that our brave Army
soldiers have cleared the last militant stronghold “Shawal
Valley” in North
Waziristan tribal region has provided a sigh of relief. It took
three-months to clear the valley. In February troops
began the final phase of the Zarb – e - Arb mission in North
Waziristan, bordering Afghanistan Birmal District, where militants
had previously operated with impunity. The incharge of the operation, Brigadier
Shabbir Narejo told reporters at a briefing, “We have cleared the Shawal
valley, where militants put up stiff resistance. Troops, gunship helicopters,
tanks and jets were used in the operation. There were up to 2,000 trained
militants in the valley, but we surprised them by launching the operation in
the peak of winter in minus 12 degrees Celsius (10.4 Fahrenheit). Six Army
soldiers lost lives in the fighting whereas up to 120 militants were killed.
Some militants had fled to Afghanistan,
but that troops had set up around 15 posts on the border to intercept any
movement in future”.
Operation Zarb - e
- Azb was launched on 15 June 2014 in a bid to flush out nurseries and militant
bases in Miranshah, Agency Head Quarter of North Waziristan and its suburbs. It
began one week after the terrorist attack on Pakistan’s busiest airport. On 8
June 2014, 10 militants from the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and TTP attacked
Jinnah International
Airport, Karachi, killing 28 people including security
personnel and wounding at least 18.
The crackdown was
intensified after the APS massacre in Peshawar, in which more than 150 people
mostly children were murdered cold bloodedly in December 2014. It
has been a very successful operation as the graph of terrorist activities in
the country dropped to the lowest during last 6/7 years and militant network in
the area has been destroyed.
Pakistan has been a victim
of worst kind of terrorism after 9/11. The militants fled from US/ISAF bombing
in Afghanistan
crossed over to Pakistan Tribal Belt where they established their
hideouts. Pakistan
suffered a lot being ally of America
in the war and faced internal and external challenges. Prominent militant
groups that emerged and fought Pakistan LEAs are Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP),
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), Jundallah, Al-Qaeda, Haqqani Network ,
East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), and sectarian outfit Lashkar-e-Jhangvi.
Earlier, the sitting regime announced peace
negotiations with the Taliban groups operating in Pakistan. The negotiations were
held through some religious scholars. The first session of talks between
committees appointed by the Pakistani Government and the Taliban was held on 26 March 2014 at
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa House in Islamabad. The Taliban did not
name representatives from their ranks, instead nominated pro-Taliban religious
figures to present their views. The terrorists called for the
implementation of Islamic Sharia in Pakistan; the
Government of Pakistan demanded the cessation of hostilities, insisting that
talks be held within the framework of the Pakistani constitution. A month-long ceasefire was reached on 1 March
2014. Anyhow, negotiations collapsed after the execution of 23 Pakistani Frontier Corps soldiers
by the Taliban on 17 February 2014. The soldiers had been held by the
insurgents since 2010, and on 17 April 2014 the TTP formally ended the
ceasefire.
Army was in full
preparation and launched a three pronged strategy, isolating targeted militant
groups, obtaining support from the political parties and saving civilians from
the backlash of the operation. Defence Minister Khawaja Asif said
that the nation stood by its military.
The combat troops
encircled militant bases in the towns of Mirali and Miranshah. Pakistani
officials said that the Afghan's National Security Forces (ANSF) was requested to seal the
border on their side so that militants do not escape. Air
Force, Navy artillery, tanks and ground troops remained engaged.
Zarb e Azb; being the
largest military operation in the Waziristan
area has found support from different entities from inside and outside of the
country. The main purpose of this operation was to bring peace to the northern
areas of the country. Zarb e Azb has got appreciation form leading journalists
and analysts from Pakistan
and it has also been supported by all the major political parties of the
country. Only Jammat-e-Islami publically criticized the operation saying that
there should be no operation in North Waziristan
and all the matters should be resolved via peace talks with Taliban. Pakistan has also got international support from
many different countries such as America
and China.
The recent
announcement of ISPR shows that after one and half year phenomenal successes
have been achieved in the operation. Last pockets close to Pak - Afghan Border
has been cleared. Eighteen months into Operation Zarb-e-Azb launched against
militants, ISPR claimed 3,400 militants have been killed so far. “3,400
terrorists killed while 837 hideouts from where they were carrying out their
terrorist acts, destroyed. About 837 hideouts
from where they were carrying out their terrorists activities have been
destroyed.
Apart, South Waziristan, once a stronghold of the TTP where the
extremists operated with impunity has also been cleared in operation
Rah-e-Nijat against Baitullah Mehsud group, launched in 2009. The towns are now
welcoming thousands of displaced families back to their homes. From the
helicopter, journalists could see scores of homes with no roofs but appearing
otherwise intact, their interiors exposed to the elements, though it was
unclear how many had been removed by the military and how many had been damaged
by the weather and fighting. Traditionally roofs in South Waziristan are built
of wood and iron sheets to hold off heavy winter snows, but from the helicopter
hundreds could be seen with their wooden skeletons bared and interiors exposed.
Authorities have
rebuilt roads, constructed health facilities, schools and restored the village water
supply network system in the area. But the lack of shelter is still a serious
issue. The Mehsud inhibited north of South Waziristan
is mostly mountainous and building house is not an easy task. Government is
providing up to 400,000 rupees ($4,000) to families for the rebuilding of their
homes.
The writer is a freelance
journalist based in London
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