Santa Cruz Sentinel

Pakistan expert: Religiosit­y aiding spike in militancy

- By Kathy Gannon

ISLAMABAD >> 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.

 ?? ISHTIAQ MAHSUD — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Pakistani Taliban patrol in their stronghold of Shawal in the Pakistani tribal region of South Waziristan.
ISHTIAQ MAHSUD — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Pakistani Taliban patrol in their stronghold of Shawal in the Pakistani tribal region of South Waziristan.

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