PM Khan vows to spend Rs100 bn annually on development of Pakistan’s tribal areas

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan. (AFP)
Updated 24 April 2019
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PM Khan vows to spend Rs100 bn annually on development of Pakistan’s tribal areas

  • Addresses tribal elders in South Waziristan, previously a semi-autonomous tribal area but now merged with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province
  • Pledges massive development, education and health infrastructure, job opportunities for the newly-merged tribal districts

PESHAWAR: Prime Minister Imran Khan said on Wednesday that Rs100 billion would be spent annually on the development of the northwestern tribal belt — a region that has for decades suffered from a lack of national investment.

Last year, Pakistan’s parliament passed legislation to merge the country’s tribal regions along the Afghan border with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, a key step in ending the area’s colonial era governance system and giving equal rights and resources to its five million population.

Without provincial status, the tribal regions have remained backward and underdeveloped. Much of the area lacks clean water and has little to no health care, education, telecommunication and infrastructure facilities.

“We plan to spend 100 billion rupees annually for the development of the newly-merged districts,” Khan said while addressing tribal elders in the Spinkai Raghzai area of South Waziristan. “We will spend huge amounts of money here that has never been spent during the past 70 years.”

The old system of colonial laws in the tribal regions denied basic legal rights to its people. Coupled with the lack of economic development, the regulations led to an enduring sense of neglect and disenfranchisement.

Due to their lawless, the tribal regions also became an easy haven for militants, gun runners and drug smugglers. The Pakistani military has carried out dozens of military operations to flush out militants in the last decade, causing mass internal displacement of tribal populations.

Khan announced that two degree colleges would be built in Wana, the headquarters of South Waziristan, and said sports grounds would be constructed throughout the district. He said each family would receive the Sehat Insaf insurance card, allowing for medical treatment of up to Rs.720,000 annually at any government hospital.

Khan said his government was also planning to build 100 kilometers of roads to connect small villages with main towns in South Waziristan, and would focus on constructing small dams to overcome potable water issue. He also promised jobs for the youth of the erstwhile tribal districts.


UN rights chief says 56 Afghan civilians killed since Pakistan conflict escalates

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UN rights chief says 56 Afghan civilians killed since Pakistan conflict escalates

  • Death toll includes 24 children and six women, with 129 others injured
  • UN says about 115,000 Afghans, 3,000 Pakistanis displaced by fighting along border

GENEVA::The United Nations rights chief said Friday that 56 Afghan civilians had been killed — nearly half of them children — since hostilities with neighboring Pakistan intensified last week.

“I plead with all parties to bring an end to the conflict, and to prioritize helping those experiencing extreme hardship,” Volker Turk said in a statement.

The neighbors have clashed along the frontier since February 26, when Afghanistan launched a border offensive in retaliation for Pakistani air strikes.

Islamabad has hit back along the border and with fresh air strikes, bombing multiple sites including the former US air base at Bagram, the capital Kabul and the southern city of Kandahar.

Turk said that since the intensification of hostilities, “56 civilians, including 24 children and six women, have been killed.”

“A further 129 people, including 41 children and 31 women, have been injured,” he said.

And since the start of the year, the numbers are even higher, with 69 civilians killed in Afghanistan and 141 injured, he said.

Pakistan insists it has not killed any civilians in the conflict. Casualty claims from both sides are difficult to verify independently.

The UN refugee agency said Thursday that around 115,000 Afghans and 3,000 people in Pakistan had been displaced by the fighting in the past week.

“Civilians on both sides of the border are now having to flee from air strikes, heavy artillery fire, mortar shelling and gunfire,” Turk said.

He lamented that a new wave of violence was affecting people “whose lives have been tormented by violence and misery for so long.”

He highlighted that over two million Afghans had returned to Afghanistan since Pakistan started to implement its “Illegal Foreigners Repatriation Plan” in September 2023.

And nearly as many were believed to remain in Pakistan, “where many face hardship and constant fear of arrest and deportation,” he said.

“As a result of the violence, humanitarian assistance is unable to reach many of those desperately in need. This is piling misery on misery,” the rights chief said.

He called on “the Pakistan military and Afghan de facto security forces to end immediately their fighting, and to prioritize helping the millions who depend on aid.”