Bangkok Post

LEARNING HOW TO TEACH WITH A BOOK IN ONE HAND AND A GUN IN THE OTHER

Anti-terrorism police are offering weapons lessons to Pakistani educators in a bid to prevent a repeat of the deadly Peshawar student massacre

- By Ismail Khan

Gunfire rang out as Fatima Bibi squeezed off three shots, hitting her target every time. Then she lowered her Glock pistol, turned to her fellow academics and smiled. Her instructor was smiling, too. “These ladies are better shots than some of our men,” said Abdul Latif, a police firearms instructor. “They learned to handle a gun in just two days. Their confidence level is remarkable.”

Dangerous times call for unusual measures in northweste­rn Pakistan, where the police are offering firearms instructio­n to school teachers and university lecturers since the Taliban massacred 150 people at a Peshawar school in December.

Ms Bibi was one of eight lecturers from the Frontier College for Women, a postgradua­te college, who attended a two-day firearms course at the provincial police firing range last month.

They learned to load, aim and fire weapons ranging from pistols to assault rifles; they also discussed self-defence techniques, and how to defend their students if the Taliban stormed in during class.

“The Dec 16 tragedy showed us that we need to learn to be able to take care of ourselves and our students,” said Naheed Hussain, an assistant professor, who took the course while still wearing her black teaching robe. “We will not replace our pens with guns. But the situation could arise where we are required to serve our country.”

The initiative for the gun lessons comes from the provincial government and the police authoritie­s in Khyber-Pakhtunkhw­a province as part of a push to increase security at schools. The province has borne the brunt of Pakistani Taliban attacks over the years.

ARMED AND DANGEROUS

Gun ownership is common across northweste­rn Pakistan, which is largely populated by ethnic Pashtuns and includes the restive tribal districts. But the advent of armed teachers has made many parents uneasy, who say it is the responsibi­lity of the state, and not teachers, to protect schools and universiti­es.

The notion of armed female teachers, in particular, has provoked consternat­ion across conservati­ve Pashtun society, raising a storm of protest that officials say could call the entire plan into doubt.

“How can we teach with a gun in one hand and a book in another?” asked Malik Khalid Khan, president of the All Primary Schools Teachers Associatio­n.

Abaseen Yusufzai, head of the Pashto department at Islamic College University, said: “This is the stupidest and most illogical thing that has happened in Pashtun society in living memory.

“Women provide moral support, food and water to our warriors, but never in our history have they been required to take up arms. It suggests that the men have lost their nerve, and the courage to fight.”

Security experts expressed scepticism about the ability of teachers to hold back Taliban militants, who are often primed with drugs when they wage suicide assaults.

“How can you expect a woman with a 9mm pistol to forestall a group of terrorists?” said Mahmood Shah, a retired army brigadier who was in charge of security for the tribal belt after 2001. “It’s just nonsense.”

Mr Shah said he opposed weapons for both male and female teachers. “Two days training and 10 shots do not make an expert in firearms,” he said. “This is militarisi­ng our educationa­l institutio­ns and putting both teachers and children at greater risk.”

But the Khyber-Pakhtunkhw­a provincial government, which is controlled by the party of the firebrand opposition politician Imran Khan, says it has little choice but to use drastic measures.

Mushtaq Ghani, the provincial minister for education and informatio­n, said the province’s 65,000 police officers were not enough to secure its 45,000 schools, colleges and universiti­es.

“This is an extraordin­ary time,” he said. “We don’t want teachers to take up guns, but it is necessary in the circumstan­ces.” In addition to the possibilit­y of armed teachers, the authoritie­s have ordered schools to raise boundary walls and hire armed security guards — expensive measures that many schools say they cannot afford.

SECURITY FIRST

Muhammad Atif, the minister for elementary education, said the government was redirectin­g US$15 million (around 490 million baht) in government money earmarked for school sanitary facilities and drinking water into the new security measures.

“There are 4,700 schools in this province that do not have boundary walls,” he said. “So let’s build walls first and think of toilets and drinking water later.”

The provision for armed teachers comes with safeguards, officials say. Only teachers who are nominated by their principal and pass the normal gun licensing process will be allowed to carry a firearm in class.

The programme is entirely voluntary, and teachers will not be allowed to display their guns openly.

Teachers themselves say they are conflicted — uncomforta­ble at the prospect of carrying a firearm, yet haunted by memories of the bloodshed at the Army Public School in December, when seven heavily-armed militants strode the corridors, flinging grenades and shooting down students.

“As I gripped the gun and opened fire I started to sweat, thinking I should have a pen in my hand and not a gun,” said Akhtar Nagina, a physics lecturer at the Frontier College for Women. “But then I remembered what the terrorists had done. And I figured I should at least have a gun in my purse, for my own protection.”

 ??  ?? SCHOLARLY SHOOTERS: Pakistani teachers are learning to use firearms after an ambush on an army-run school killed 150 people, including 134 children.
SCHOLARLY SHOOTERS: Pakistani teachers are learning to use firearms after an ambush on an army-run school killed 150 people, including 134 children.
 ??  ?? IN THE LINE OF FIRE: Teachers in Pakistan’s northwest frontier have been given special permission to carry concealed firearms to counter Islamist militants, but the notion is raising a storm of protest.
IN THE LINE OF FIRE: Teachers in Pakistan’s northwest frontier have been given special permission to carry concealed firearms to counter Islamist militants, but the notion is raising a storm of protest.
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