Pakistan’s national security advisor rejects reports of ‘amnesty’ to Pakistani Taliban fighters

Pakistan's national security advisor Moeed Yusuf gestures as he speaks to members of the media in Islamabad on September 15, 2021 about the ongoing situation in Afghanistan. (AFP/File)
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Updated 11 November 2021
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Pakistan’s national security advisor rejects reports of ‘amnesty’ to Pakistani Taliban fighters

  • Pakistani government, banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan earlier this week agreed on a month-long ceasefire
  • On Wednesday, Pakistan's Supreme Court also questioned Prime Minister Imran Khan on talks with outlawed group

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s National Security Adviser (NSA) Moeed Yusuf on Wednesday rejected reports that the government was granting “amnesty” to members of the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), saying no decision had been made in this regard. 

The statement comes a week after the Pakistani government and the outlawed group agreed on a month-long ceasefire.  

Talks with the TTP were "ongoing" and the truce would be extended if the negotiations progressed, Pakistan's Information Minister Chaudhry Fawad Hussain said on Monday, maintaining that the dialogue was in accordance with the Constitution of Pakistan. 

The TTP, or the Pakistani Taliban, is a separate group from the Afghan Taliban. Thousands of Pakistanis have been killed in violence perpetrated by the group over the last two decades.  

The group has accepted responsibility for several high-profile attacks, including an assassination attempt on activist and now Nobel prize winner Malala Yousafzai and an attack on an army-run school in Peshawar in which 134 children and 19 adults were killed in December 2014.  

“I don't know from where this talk started [of granting amnesty], that a decision has been made. There is no such decision [of a general amnesty],” Yusuf said on Dawn News show 'Live with Adil Shahzeb'. 

“State too has experience; we also know that previous agreements didn’t work,” he said, adding that the government would assess whether the TTP was serious after further talks.  

“However, state has decided that if ceasefire and talks [continue] and they [TTP] agree to accept state’s terms, then we can talk [further].” 

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court of Pakistan, which has been hearing a case relating to the 2014 Peshawar school massacre, summoned Prime Minister Imran Khan to question if his government had acted against those involved in the attack and those responsible for providing security. PM Khan appeared before the court and promised to take action against negligent officials. 

"State is absolutely clear [on this] and sensitive. Those who were martyred were our kids, our soldiers and civilians," Yusuf said.  

"Our tribes [people based in Pakistan’s northwestern tribal region] have sentiments for what they lost, so it cannot happen that the state just shuts its eyes.”


In Pakistan’s Bannu, people start their day with a sugar rush

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In Pakistan’s Bannu, people start their day with a sugar rush

  • While much of Pakistan favors savory breakfasts, residents of Bannu prefer a sweet, caramelized halwa
  • People line up before sunrise at the decades-old Speen Sar restaurant to cherish its signature dish

BANNU, Pakistan: Before sunrise, the narrow lane outside Speen Sar, a modest restaurant, fills with customers waiting for halwa, a dense sweet made from wheat starch, sugar and clarified butter, that serves as breakfast for many people in this northwestern city.

Inside the restaurant’s kitchen, the morning air is thick with the scent of caramelized sugar and heated ghee. A chef leans over a large metal vat, dissolving sugar into the hot fat before adding a slurry of flour and water. With rhythmic, heavy strokes, he stirs the mixture until it thickens into a glossy halwa.

He pours the sweet onto a tray and rushes toward the counter, where a crowd of patrons has already gathered. Three cooks work in quick succession to keep pace with demand, turning out batch after batch during the breakfast rush in Bannu, a city in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

While halwa is widely eaten as a dessert or festival sweet across South and Central Asia and the Middle East, Bannu stands apart for turning it into a morning staple. Across most of Pakistan, breakfast tends to be savory, typically consisting of omelets, parathas or puris, and in some places nihari, a slow-cooked meat stew. Here, however, halwa is not a side dish but the meal itself, eaten plain or with bread before the workday begins.

“We open the shop at the time of morning prayer, and after prayer, we start preparing,” says Zahid Khan, whose grandfather Akbar Ghulam opened the restaurant over six decades ago.

The shop’s name, Speen Sar — Pashto for “white-haired man” — dates back to its earliest days. Khan said the business began as a small stall run by his grandfather. As he grew older and his hair turned white, customers began directing others to the “speen sar” shop, the place where the white-haired man sold halwa. The nickname endured, eventually becoming the shop’s official identity.

Speen Sar relies on a labor-intensive process of extracting starch from wheat flour.

“In our halwa, we use ghee, sugar, flour and other ingredients. From the flour, the starch that comes out is what we use to make the halwa,” Khan explained before examining the cooking process in his kitchen.

Bannu sits at the crossroads between Pakistan’s former tribal areas and the settled plains of the northwest, and the halwa shop serves as a rare social equalizer, drawing laborers, traders, students and travelers to the same counter each morning. For many passing through the city, stopping for halwa is not optional.

“Whenever I come from Waziristan ... the first thing I do is start with halwa,” says Irafullah Mehsud, an expatriate worker. “I eat the halwa first, and only then move on to other things.”

The popularity of the dish is partly due to its shelf life and to what the owners call good quality. At Rs500 ($1.80) per kilogram, it is an affordable luxury as well.

“Our halwa is widely consumed with breakfast, and it does not spoil quickly. If you want, that you will eat it tomorrow, you can even set some aside for the next day,” Khan said, pointing to a tray of nishasta halwa, a variety made by extracting wheat starch before cooking.

While the region offers variations including sohan halwa, milk-based recipes, and carrot-infused batches, this halwa offered by Speen Sar remains the undisputed king of the breakfast table in this city.

“This is a tradition of the people of Bannu. Early in the morning, everyone eats it and comes here,” says Razaullah Khan, a student at a local college. “Eating halwa is a common practice here ... but this one is the most popular. People eat it for breakfast.”

For the elders of the city, the habit is as much about routine as it is about flavor.

“This tradition has been going on for the past forty to fifty years ever since I can remember,” says Sakhi Marjan, a local elder in his late sixties. “We first come to the Azad Mandi market and then come here to eat halwa. We really enjoy this halwa. It is delicious.”

As the sun rises over Bannu, this ‘sweet’ trade shows no sign of slowing. For those like Gul Sher, a regular from Jani Khel, a town in a neighboring tribal district, a day without the local sweet is a day started wrong.

“As soon as I step into Bannu, I start my day with halwa. After that, the rest of the day goes well,” Sher said before finishing his plate of halwa.

“It is a sweet dish, and it makes the day better. It is a good thing.”