Peshawar bombing: The Taliban strikes at the place of the frontier

The Pakistani city of Peshawar is on high alert after 13 people died when two bombs exploded in a market and a suicide bomber attacked a police checkpoint. Six people died and another 70 were injured when bombs exploded in the marketplace and gunmen fired at police when they arrived on the scene. Two gunmen were shot dead. Another five died when a suicide bomber ploughed into a military checkpoint on the outskirts killing four soldiers. Police placed restrictions on motorist movements in the capital of North West Frontier Province which has seen a marked increase in violence in the last three weeks in response to the army’s anti-Taliban operation in the Swat valley.

The Peshawar attacks came hours after the Taliban warned of countrywide attacks. The Taliban has claimed responsibility for Wednesday’s devastating 500kg suicide bomb at the Lahore offices of Pakistan’s intelligence service ISI and city police that killed 26 people and wounded 250. A senior police officer confirmed a main suspect had been arrested with links to the Taliban. Other attacks may be planned on Multan, Rawalpindi, and the capital, Islamabad. Hakimullah Mehsud, a deputy to Pakistani Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud, said their targets are security forces, “killing innocent people in Swat and other adjoining areas.”

Today, Peshawar residents told Al Jazeera people were afraid to leave their houses because of the likelihood of more violence. “Things have come to such a pass that from morning till evening there is a sense of foreboding,” Shah Gul, a shopkeeper, said. “When a person leaves his house in the morning, his wife, his sister, and his parents are not sure if he will return in the evening.” Others criticised the government for launching its military offensive to drive the Taliban out of the Swat valley and adjoining districts. “Our rulers should get some sense into their heads and change their policies,” Mohammad Ishfaq, a local businessman, said.

Peshawar has been overrun with refugees fleeing the offensive. Between two and three million people have been displaced in Swat, Buner and Dir districts in the NWFP. Heavy fighting between Pakistan’s military and Taliban insurgents has continued for three weeks. The Taliban have retreated to the mountains but still hold 30 percent of Mingora. Many of the refugees fleeing towards Peshawar may be Taliban militants.

Both sides have identified Peshawar’s dominant Pashtuns as a crucial force to win over. The Pashtuns are renowned for their generosity but many are inundated by refugees from the Swat valley. “We are poor people. Still we have given shelter to six people in my tiny, two-room house,” said Farooq Khan, a shopkeeper in Rustam village, Swabi, 140km northwest of Peshawar.” I cannot afford them, but it would be against Pakhtun tradition to deny shelter to anyone,” he said.

The city of Peshawar was given its name by Moghul rulers in the 16th century. The name means “place of the frontier” in Farsi. It has long been a place that has hovered on the edge of war. It was the centre of Afghan refugees fleeing across the Khyber Pass after the Soviet invasion in 1979 and again after the US invaded in 2001. The danger is Peshawar will now become a frontier again. The stakes are high for Islamabad. Support for the war in Swat is holding but if Peshawar becomes a regular target, then the Pashtuns may end, or even switch, their support. If that happens, Pakistan’s war against the Taliban would quickly collapse with potentially disastrous consequences.

Pakistan’s Swat province on the verge of all out war and a humanitarian crisis

Hundreds of thousands of civilians are fleeing the Swat valley as fighting intensifies between Pakistani government troops and the Taliban. On Friday, the UN Nations High Commissioner for Refugees warned of a humanitarian crisis as large numbers arrive in overcrowded temporary accommodation. The UN agency said half a million people have been displaced in the last few days bringing the total amount of Swat refugees arriving in safer areas of North West Frontier Province to a million since August 2008. “The new arrivals are going to place huge additional pressure on resources,” said UNHCR spokesman Ron Redmond.

Al Jazeera’s Kamal Hyder said many now fleeing Swat are stranded along the jammed highway between Swat’s largest city Mingora and Mardan. Many had to leave suddenly after a government warning on Thursday the fighting was about to intensify. “Many people who are stuck inside Swat are asking the government why there was no plan [and] why they were not given adequate warning to get out,” he said.

The longstanding curfew in the Malakand division added to the misery of the displaced and a large number of people were trapped in their homes in Mingora and other areas of Swat. Today, the Swat administration announced a temporary relaxation of the curfew around Swat from 6am to 1pm to enable civilians to flee the anti-Taliban offensive. Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and President Asif Ali Zardari promised to minimise civilian casualties and look after those displaced by the conflict. Zardari said a billion rupee fund would be set up for the rehabilitation of refugees.

Pakistan’s army launched an offensive on Friday after a government order to eliminate militants from the Islamist stronghold. They attacked Taliban positions with warplanes and helicopter gunships. The helicopters targeted militant hideouts in Mingora and killed 15 fighters. Mortar fire in the city also resulted in civilian casualties. Militants used houses as bunkers to fight back. Troops also engaged militants in other locations in Swat, including Rama Kandhao ridge in Matta, and destroyed an insurgent headquarters in Loenamal. There have been several hundred casualties to date.

Until recently, the government in Islamabad was oblivious to Swat, just 130km from the capital Islamabad. The former tourist area has become a no-go area after the Taliban took over the province. According to the army, Taliban groups have blown up 165 schools for girls, 80 video shops, 22 barber shops and destroyed 20 bridges. One million children have missed out on Pakistan’s anti-polio vaccinations after the government deemed it too dangerous to implement the immunisation drive. Haji Adeel, a senator and senior leader of the NWFP’s ruling Awami National Party, concedes the central government has lost control. “Swat is a part of Pakistan but no governor, chief minister or the prime minister can venture to go there,” he said.

Swat’s problems date to 2007. While Pakistani leader Pervez Musharraf was locked in a struggle to keep the presidency, popular Taliban leader and cleric Maulana Fazalullah (pictured) launched a “holy war” to take control of the province with his 10,000 strong private army. Fazalullah collects one-tenth of agricultural income in taxes, uses FM radio to pass on his decrees to the local population, and has his own judiciary to hear cases and hands down verdicts.

Although Islamabad sent in 20,000 troops to oppose Fazalullah, the capital Mingora was under effective Taliban control by January 2009. The Taliban set a deadline of 15 January to close all schools, especially those of girls. When some schools defied the ban, they were blown up. But with a central government and attendant media still occupied with India and the aftermath of the Mumbai bombing, it seemed Swat would be left to its own devices.

The Islamabad government signed a peace accord with the Taliban in February which agreed to Sharia Law in the province. US defence officials and NATO were not impressed by a surrender to extremists fanning out from the Afghan border. NWFP Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain defended the settlement. “The need of the hour is to put water on fire, not to fuel it,” he said.

The agreement began to unravel in April when the Taliban entered the Lower Dir and Buner districts, 100 kilometres from Islamabad. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called it an “existentialist threat” to Pakistan’s government. After President Zardari met Obama in Washington this week there was a swift about turn in the government’s position. Zardari said there were 3000 “terrorists” in the Swat and his government was going to eliminate them all. When the White House press corps asked him to clarify what “eliminate” means, Zardari said “eliminate means exactly what it means.” When asked does it mean: “killing them all”, Zardari replied: “That’s what it means.”