FATA reforms: future of tribal region hangs in the balance

Pakistan's tribal region borders different districts of KP province on the one side and Afghanistan on the other.
Updated 25 February 2018
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FATA reforms: future of tribal region hangs in the balance

PESHAWAR: Pakistan’s northwestern tribal belt was once the focus of international attention. The area constituted one of the largest ungoverned spaces in the region and was used by various transnational militant networks as a sanctuary.
As the world began to call it the global “ground zero for terror”, Pakistan launched a string of military operations to reclaim the craggy mountainous terrain abutting Afghanistan and re-establish its writ over that territory.
Even so the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) continue to be a major challenge to the country. The British used the region as a buffer zone to avoid a direct confrontation with Russia, and the Pakistani authorities did not revisit this colonial policy. For decades, there was no attempt to mainstream the region by changing its anomalous legal and administrative systems introduced to control, not govern, the tribal zone. As a result, FATA remained quite underdeveloped and its people did not have the same citizenship rights as other Pakistanis.
However, the country’s recent experience with violent extremism in the area has compelled policymakers to take a fresh look at the situation, and it has turned out to be a daunting challenge.
In a report in August 2016, the Fata Reforms Committee, established to look into the issue, recommended that FATA should merge with the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP). Explaining the rationale behind its recommendation, the committee said that the seven tribal agencies in the area were not deeply integrated with one another, and their residents mostly interacted with people in the adjacent settled districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP).
According to the 2017 census, FATA has 558,379 households and a population of just over five million whereas the 1998 census declared that the population was 3.1 million. Many analysts remain skeptical toward the recent census results, suggesting much of the tribal population has either migrated to other parts of the country or been displaced by militancy and subsequent military operations.
Malik Khan Marjan, Chief Patron of the FATA Grand Alliance, told Arab News: “The FATA population has been downplayed in the recent census to give it a small share in the national resources.”
An author and research scholar, Dr. Khadim Hussain, said that ungoverned spaces such as FATA have created a massive industry for war, kidnapping, drug trafficking, car lifting, hired assassins, and private militias who established their training camps over there in the past.
“Mainstreaming FATA will change that, and if the region is mainstreamed and a local government is installed there, the fund meant for FATA development will also be overseen and audited. At present, no one knows where the FATA funds are being spent,” he added.
While Dr. Hussain agreed that FATA should be merged with KP, Marjan opposed the idea and said that the tribal belt should be turned into a separate province. He pointed out that FATA Medical College was being set up in Kohat, a settled area, instead of the tribal region.
“Merger with KP cannot remove our sense of deprivation,” he said. “We have been subjected to such politics of dispossession for a very long time. The only way to bring it to an end is to turn FATA into a province.”
A politico-religious party, Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F), has also been railing against the FATA-KP merger. The party’s provincial spokesperson, Hajji Abdul Jalil Jan, told Arab News: “Until now, FATA has been seeking donations from the federal government. If the merger takes place, the region will seek alms from a weak province like KP.
“If FATA is turned into a separate province it will get its own resources like the other provinces. A provincial status is therefore better for its people.”
However, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, the party ruling the KP province, has launched a campaign to merge FATA with KP.
Talking to Arab News, the province’s chief minister, Pervez Khattak, mentioned the cultural affinities among the residents of KP and FATA. “They both speak Pashto,” he pointed out, “and their culture is also the same. Hence, it makes sense to merge the two.”
Responding to a question, he said: “There is no threat of an Afghan claim on FATA even if we merge it with KP. We are fencing the border with Afghanistan and much of the work has already been done.”
The chief minister added that if FATA was merged with KP, it would receive 100 billion rupees ($903 million) a year for 10 years, bringing it on par with other developed areas of the country. He also disputed the claim that the merger of the two entities would take a long time.
“Once an administrator is appointed to supervise the process,” he added, “it could be carried out within a month.”


Pakistan alleges India behind Balochistan attacks that killed 18 civilians, 15 troops

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Pakistan alleges India behind Balochistan attacks that killed 18 civilians, 15 troops

  • Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi accuses India of planning coordinated attacks across Balochistan this week 
  • Military says it killed 133 militants on Friday and Saturday in separate operations across various areas in Balochistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi this week alleged that India was behind the recent coordinated attacks in the southwestern Balochistan province that the military says killed 18 civilians and 15 troops, vowing to go after those responsible for the violence. 

Pakistan’s military said on Saturday that it had killed 133 militants in the past two days in separate operations in Balochistan. The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said 41 militants were killed in operations in Panjgur and Harnai areas on Friday while 92 militants, including three suicide bombers, were killed on Saturday as security forces repelled coordinated attacks on civilians and law enforcement personnel in Quetta, Gwadar, Mastung, Nushki, Dalbandin, Kharan, Panjgur, Tump and Pasni areas. 

It added that 18 civilians, including women, children, elderly people and laborers, were killed in the attacks in Gwadar and Kharan, while 15 security personnel were also killed during clearance operations and armed standoffs.

“India is behind these attacks,” Naqvi said during a joint press conference in Quetta late Saturday night with Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti. “I can tell you for sure that India planned these attacks along with these terrorists.”

He vowed that Islamabad would go after the militants who carried out these attacks and their “masters.”

“At this time it is very necessary that the world knows that the main country that is behind terrorism is India, who not only financially supports terrorists but also supports them in their planning and strategy as well,” the minister said. 

In its statement on Saturday, the ISPR said the attacks were launched by “Indian sponsored Fitna al Hindustan,” a reference the military frequently uses for the separatist Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) militant group. 

The BLA also issued a statement on Saturday, saying it had launched what it called “Operation Herof 2.0,” claiming responsibility for attacks in multiple locations across Balochistan. 

The military had said intelligence reports have confirmed the attacks were orchestrated and directed by militant leaders operating from outside Pakistan who were in direct communication with attackers during the assaults.

Pakistan has frequently blamed India for supporting militant attacks in Balochistan and its northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) provinces, charges that New Delhi has vehemently denied. 

Balochistan, which borders Iran and Afghanistan, has faced a decades-long insurgency by separatist militant groups, with Pakistani authorities frequently accusing foreign actors of backing the violence. India has repeatedly denied such allegations.