The Pak Banker

The good fight

- Mohammad Ali Babakhel

The consequenc­es of war are assessed in the context of human losses and value of damaged property. Cultural, sociologic­al and psychologi­cal impacts are often missed. As per The Pakistan Economic Survey 2017-18 we sustained a loss of $126.79 billion to terrorism leading to displaceme­nt that threatened tribal-cultural integrity and altered demographi­c patterns. Operations in the tribal areas and Swat displaced 2.7 million to 3.5m people. In Swat, the displaced sought refuge in Mardan, Swabi and Charsadda. Local hospitalit­y revived Pakh-tunwali. Displaceme­nts tested philanthro­pic instincts. Operations in Fata and Swat forced migration to Karachi, Islamabad, D.I. Khan, Kohat, Peshawar, Charsadda, Abbottabad and Bannu affecting the peace indexation and socioecono­mic indicators of these districts.

Post 9/11, there were property purchases by migrants in Peshawar's walled city, diluting the Hindko-speaking presence. Displaceme­nt forced the rich tribal culture towards a transition led by technologi­cal innovation­s. Democratis­ation resulted in detribalis­ation and inconvenie­nce for women and children. It enabled the youth to distinguis­h between collective and individual responsibi­lity but also impeded rights to education, health and vote.

Militants attacked many educationa­l institutes while the insertion of Article 25-A in the Constituti­on reflects the state's realisatio­n of education's importance. Militancy also upset anti-polio efforts.

Did we capitalise on our opportunit­ies? To establish military courts and merge Fata with KP three constituti­onal amendments were made but strengthen­ing ATCs remained a low priority. The 25th Amendment is not just a geographic­al merger. It's a plan to strengthen national integratio­n, rule of law and human rights and a realisatio­n that delaying reforms can provide space to violent non-state actors. To deter intrusion, border fencing began in 2017, with 85 per cent so far completed. Cross-border attacks from Afghanista­n fell from 82 in 2019 to 11 in 2020.

Terrorism badly impacted tourism - during its peak five-star hotels in Karachi, Peshawar, Gwadar and Islamabad were attacked. Improved peace in Karachi and CPEC areas led to 80pc annual hotel occupancy rate. Police Order 2002 was debatably amended and terrorism negatively impacted the pace of police reforms. Security challenges spawned specialise­d units that further militarise­d the police. Security threats made CT the top priority - with a negative effect on crime prevention and detection. A surge in kidnapping­s, bank robberies and extortion was recorded. Fortified police stations and reduced foot and mobile patrolling widened the gulf between police and community but the martyrdom of 7,069 police officials brought the two closer.

Surveillan­ce of proscribed persons and groups is an added task. The courts, media and human right groups plugged the loopholes in the process. Presently, 79 groups are proscribed. In November 2018, 8,374 persons were on Schedule IV; the number today is 3,597, showing improved CTD scrutiny. The mushroomin­g of electronic media post-9/11 led to competitio­n for ratings and glorificat­ion of terrorism. The National Action Plan barred this and the media improved its coverage of terrorism.

The 'war on terror' complicate­d matters. Issues like 'collateral damage', disappeara­nces, targeted killings etc were widely covered but objective analysis was lacking. Human rights litigation registered an upward trend. A commission was constitute­d to deal with enforced disappeara­nces. Since its inception, 6,944 cases were registered till Jan 31, 2021 and 4,822 disposed of.

To compensate a family of a missing person, the Islamabad High Court ordered monthly compensati­on. In 2018, IHC termed the suspension of cellular services for security reasons illegal but in 2020 the Supreme Court ruled they could be suspended in "special circumstan­ces".

For compensati­on for civilian victims of terrorism, Balochista­n and Punjab enacted laws. Other provinces should follow suit.

Sadly, our LEAs are fighting 21st-century encrypted communicat­ions with 20th-century legislatio­n. Though enhanced encryption was introduced to protect privacy this allowed criminals and terrorists to communicat­e secretly. The Constituti­on's Article 140-A pertains to LGs and devolution. But while combating extremism, LGs remained underutili­sed. Besides kinetic measures, enactment of laws, institutio­nal developmen­t and capacity building were priorities but synchronis­ation was weak.

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