Monterey Herald

Expert says religiosit­y aiding spike in militancy

- By Kathy Gannon

Militant attacks are on the rise in Pakistan amid a growing religiosit­y that has brought greater intoleranc­e, prompting one expert to voice concern the country could be overwhelme­d by religious extremism.

Pakistani authoritie­s are embracing strengthen­ing religious belief among the population to bring the country closer together. But it’s doing just the opposite, creating intoleranc­e and opening up space for a creeping resurgence in militancy, said Mohammad Amir Rana, executive director of the independen­t Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies.

“Unfortunat­ely, instead of helping to inculcate better ethics and integrity, this phenomenon is encouragin­g a tunnel vision” that encourages violence, intoleranc­e and hate, he wrote recently in a local newspaper. “Religiosit­y has begun to define the Pakistani citizenry.”

Militant violence in Pakistan has spiked: In the past week alone, four vocational school instructor­s who advocated for women’s rights were traveling together when they were gunned down in a Pakistan border region. A Twitter death threat against Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai attracted an avalanche of trolls. They heaped abuse on the young champion of girls education, who survived a Pakistani Taliban bullet to the head. A couple of men on a motorcycle opened fire on a police check-post not far from the Afghan border killing a young police constable.

In recent weeks, at least a dozen military and paramilita­ry men have been killed in ambushes, attacks and operations against militant hideouts, mostly in the western border regions.

A military spokesman this week said the rising violence is a response to an aggressive military assault on militant hideouts in regions bordering Afghanista­n and the reunificat­ion of splintered and deeply violent anti-Pakistan terrorist groups, led by the Tehreek-e-Taliban. The group is driven by a radical religious ideology that espouses violence to enforce its extreme views.

Gen. Babar Ifitkar said the reunified Pakistani Taliban have found a headquarte­rs in eastern Afghanista­n. He also accused hostile neighbor India of financing and outfitting a reunified Taliban, providing them with equipment like night vision goggles, improvised explosive devises and small weapons.

India and Pakistan routinely trade allegation­s that the other is using militants to undermine stability and security at home.

Security analyst and fellow at the Center for Internatio­nal Security and Cooperatio­n, Asfandyar Mir, said the reunificat­ion of a splintered militancy is dangerous news for Pakistan.

“The reunificat­ion of various splinters into the (Tehreek-e-Taliban) central organizati­on is a major developmen­t, which makes the group very dangerous,” said Mir.

The TTP claimed responsibi­lity for the 2012 shooting of Yousafzai. Its former spokesman, Ehsanullah Ehsan, who mysterious­ly escaped Pakistan military custody to flee to the country, tweeted a promise that the Taliban would kill her if she returned home.

Iftikar, in a briefing of foreign journalist­s this week, said Pakistani military personnel aided Ehsan’s escape, without elaboratin­g. He said the soldiers involved had been punished and efforts were being made to return Ehsan to custody.

The government reached out to Twitter to shut down Ehsan’s account after he threatened Yousafzai, although the military and government at first suggested it was a fake account.

But Rana, the commentato­r, said the official silence that greeted the threatenin­g tweet encouraged religious intoleranc­e to echo in Pakistani society unchecked.

“The problem is religiosit­y has very negative expression in Pakistan,” he said in an interview late Friday. “It hasn’t been utilized to promote the positive, inclusive tolerant religion.”

Instead, successive Pakistani government­s as well as its security establishm­ents have exploited extreme religious ideologies to garner votes, appease political religious groups, or target enemies, he said.

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