Mustafa Qadri August 22, 2010 GLOBAL solidarity with Pakistan and the soft power of humanitarian assistance can help deliver regional and global stability more effectively than any troop surge or drone strike. As the monsoon rains continue to pelt over Pakistan this weekend, however, the US has continued its controversial drone strikes on suspected militants [...]
Turning grief into goodwill
August 22nd, 2010 · No Comments
Tags: AfPak · Pakistan · Pakistan floods 2010 · Taliban · terrorism
Flood aid to ailing Pakistan can repair lasting wounds
August 17th, 2010 · No Comments
Mustafa Qadri Last Updated: August 16. 2010 9:00PM UAE / August 16. 2010 5:00PM GMT When the UN secretary general Ban Ki-Moon described flood-ravaged Pakistan as the worst natural disaster he had ever seen, he was not merely describing the extent of the devastation. He was also underlining the extent to which the outside world [...]
Tags: AfPak · Pakistan · Pakistan floods 2010 · Taliban · terrorism · United States
Aiding Pakistan will protect West’s security
August 17th, 2010 · No Comments
FEW will not have been moved by images of flood-ravaged Pakistan. Now in their second week, the floods are believed to have affected one-third of Pakistan’s land and just over one-tenth of the entire population. In a nation of more than 170 million, that is an astonishing number. According to the UN, the Pakistan floods [...]
Tags: AfPak · Pakistan · Pakistan floods 2010 · Taliban · terrorism · United States
Why US Can’t Drop Pakistan
August 9th, 2010 · No Comments
SECURITY | SOUTH ASIA | PAKISTAN August 9, 2010By Mustafa Qadri The WikiLeaks files won’t destroy ties between the two. The US decision to withdraw from Afghanistan has made sure of that. At first glance it appeared that the smoking gun had finally been found. That was certainly the initial impression when, on July 25, Internet whistleblower site [...]
Tags: Afghanistan · AfPak · Ayesha Siddiqua · David Cameron · double standards · India · NATO · Pakistan · Taliban · United Kingdom · United States · Wikileaks
Cameron fed Pakistan’s victim complex
July 29th, 2010 · No Comments
Cameron’s comments stoke a dangerous perception in Pakistan that its efforts in the war against the Taliban have been ignored Mustafa Qadri, guardian.co.uk, Thursday 29 July 2010 18.15 BST News of Cameron’s visit may have been sidelined by Pakistan’s worst-ever air disaster. Yet his speech in Bangalore, India, has fast become infamous here. It isn’t [...]
Tags: Afghanistan · David Cameron · double standards · India · Pakistan · Taliban · terrorism · United Kingdom · Wikileaks
Pakistan’s mixed blessings
June 7th, 2010 · No Comments
Violence and uncertainty in Pakistan are driving increasing numbers of people to seek solace in superstition and prayer
Mustafa Qadri,
guardian.co.uk, Monday 7 June 2010 07.59 BST
More and more Pakistanis are looking to prayer for protection in these troubled times. In the absence of credible, secular options, the fatalism this generates is a mixed blessing.
Tags: Ahmadiyya · Islam · mystacism · Pakistan · poverty · Sufism · superstition · Taliban
Interview with Pervez Hoodbhoy
May 26th, 2010 · No Comments
For three decades Pervez Hoodbhoy, a Professor of Particle Physics at Qaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad, has been promoting science and humanism in Pakistan. His was one of the earliest voices to sound the alarm not only against the Pakistan Taliban movement but also against the perils of developing nuclear weapons and the deepening religious intolerance that has been aided in large part by the Pakistan state. In this fascinating and insightful encounter, journalist Mustafa Qadri speaks with Professor Hoodbhoy about science, Islam, and the challenges faced by Pakistan.
Tags: democracy · double standards · humanism · Islam · modernity · Pakistaniaat · Pervez Hoodbhoy · political violence · science · Taliban · terrorism
Taliban: the indistinguishable enemy
May 16th, 2010 · No Comments
The US-led occupation of Afghanistan has transformed the once-reviled Taliban into freedom fighters for the Pashtun people
Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 16 May 2010 13:00 BST
They may be repressive fanatics who enslave women and give sanctuary to al-Qaida, but the US-led occupation of Afghanistan has transformed the Taliban into Pashtun freedom fighters. There are two principal reasons for this.
Tags: Afghanistan · Algerian Revolution · Eqbal Ahmad · extrajudicial executions · Hamid Karzai · insurgency · ISAF · Kabul · NATO · Seymour Hersh · Taliban · United States · war crimes
Why Pakistan has to work, despite its failings
April 26th, 2010 · No Comments
Ethnic and religious identity politics must not be allowed to sabotage Pakistan’s continued survival
Mustafa Qadri
The Guardian, Monday 26 April 2010 12:09 BST
Many an observer has written Pakistan’s obituary. Whether or not it was ever a good idea, Pakistan has managed to survive the past six decades. Although ethnic and religious identity politics has routinely threatened its dismemberment, there remains no credible option but to make Pakistan work.
Tags: Ahmadiyya · Balochistan · democracy · Pakhtunkhwa · Pakistan · Punjab · revolution · self determination · separatism · Sindh · Taliban
My enemy’s enemy is no longer my friend
March 8th, 2010 · No Comments
FOR well on three decades, Pakistan’s military establishment has been sympathetic to Islamist militancy, causing many to doubt its bona fides in the war against the Taliban, now in its ninth year.
But recent developments in this war suggest that military planners have finally realised the risks of this most dangerous of relationships. Army chief Ashfaq Kayani recently noted that a Taliban society at home and in Afghanistan was not in Pakistan’s interests. In the past, Pakistan supported the Taliban in Afghanistan and its own tribal areas in a quest to achieve “strategic depth” against rival India. Now, Kayani concedes, a stable and friendly Afghanistan is sufficient strategic depth for Pakistan.
Tags: Afghanistan · Ashfaq Pervez Kayani · Farzana Shaikh · Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar · Mullah Omar · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Pervez Musharraf · Shuja Nawaz · Taliban
Interview on Radio Australia
March 2nd, 2010 · No Comments
Today I was interviewed by Phillip Adams on Radio National Australia about Pakistan’s changing relationship with the Taliban. You can listen and download the interview here.
Tags: ABC Radio · Afghanistan · Karachi · Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar · Mullah Omar · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Saudi Arabia · Taliban · United States
Empty diplomacy in Afghanistan
February 8th, 2010 · No Comments
Negotiating with the Taliban is too little, too late – western allies need to fix the socioeconomic mess started long before 9/11
Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Monday 8 February 2010 08.00 GMT
Memory spans are short in modern politics, but even by those standards the relative ease with which the discourse on Afghanistan has shifted from fighting the Taliban to negotiating with them is remarkable.
Tags: Afghanistan · Barack Obama · corruption · democracy · Hamid Karzai · justice · Mullah Omar · Pakistan · poverty · Taliban
Afghanistan — The Exit Fee
February 1st, 2010 · No Comments
Getting out of Afghanistan won’t be cheap. Mustafa Qadri takes a look at the West’s new hope for a solution to its Afghanistan problem
After much anticipation, Western leaders have finally put some meat on their previously bare-bones proposals for stabilising Afghanistan over the next few years. The short story is that President Obama is sticking to the plan he outlined in his speech at West Point last year, whereby he intends to hand responsibility for the country’s governance and security back to the Afghan authorities over a five-year period starting from 2011.
Tags: Afghan National Army · Afghanistan · AfPak · Barack Obama · International Security Assistance Force · Mullah Omar · Pakistan · Taliban
Who’d be a hack in Swat?
December 19th, 2009 · No Comments
Journalism is a dangerous profession in Pakistan. But a vibrant, relatively free press still exists in this volatile country
For as long as anyone cares to remember, journalism has been a dangerous profession in Pakistan. Although of late much of the attention has focused on the risks to foreign journalists, the situation for local reporters is equally, if not more, parlous.
First consider that virtually all the on-the-ground news you read from Pakistan, especially from conflict zones, has been gathered by a local reporter under considerable personal risk. That is certainly the case for journalists working in the northwest frontier where the Taliban are most active. “I [do some] work for Voice of America,” one veteran reporter, who requested anonymity, told me in the safety of a hotel room in Islamabad. “Even now, I do not tell [the Taliban he interviews] that. It would mean certain death.”
Tags: democracy · freedom of speech · GeoTV · Musa Khankh · Pakistan · Swat valley · Taliban
Pakistan is losing this great game
December 11th, 2009 · No Comments
Barack Obama’s surge in Afghanistan worries Pakistan – when the US leaves, it will still have to deal with the Taliban
Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Friday 11 December 2009 16:00 GMT
There is more to President Obama’s policy shift in central Asia than more boots in Afghanistan. For Pakistan it represents an escalation of US drone strikes in the tribal areas and continued pressure on its army to immediately engage the Taliban and al-Qaida despite the practical complexities of the task.
The fundamental problem for Pakistan is that Obama’s acceleration of the war against the Taliban has been calculated largely on the basis of domestic US political demands and not those of the region, let alone Pakistan. Already under intense pressure at home from the financial crisis and the unpopularity of the US presence in Afghanistan, Obama must deliver some semblance of victory before he bids for a second term as commander-in-chief in 2012.
Tags: Afghanistan · AfPak · Barack Obama · Mullah Omar · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan · US troop surge 2009-2010
The other battle for Pakistan
December 5th, 2009 · No Comments
Now that an amnesty providing immunity to thousands has expired, Pakistan’s supreme court has the chance to showcase its merits
· Mustafa Qadri
· guardian.co.uk, Saturday 5 December 2009 18.00 GMT
It may be more a matter of wits than weapons, but the battle for control of Pakistan’s executive branch of government is as significant for the country as the war against the Taliban. Resolving this latest crisis, the fiercest tussle over the stewardship of the country since Pervez Musharraf was ousted from the presidency in August 2008, will determine the future of Pakistan’s parliamentary democracy for many years to come.
Tags: Asif Ali Zardari · Benazir Bhutto · democracy · Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry · National Reconciliation Ordinance · Nawaz Sharif · Pakistan · Pervez Musharraf · Punjab · rule of law · separation of powers doctrine · Shahbaz Sharif · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan · Yusuf Raza Gilani
Should He Stay Or Should He Go?
December 4th, 2009 · No Comments
A troop surge AND a withdrawal by July 2011? Despite the fuss, Obama’s Afghanistan speech marks very little in the way of new policy, writes Mustafa Qadri
“Unlike Vietnam, we are not facing a broad-based popular insurgency.” Those were President Obama’s confident words as he announced a major US troop surge into Afghanistan earlier this week.
The US may have entered Afghanistan to clean out what was believed to be the key haven for the international terrorist network known as al Qaeda. But in the intervening eight years, America’s main opponents in the deserts and towns of Afghanistan have been the young men of rural Kandahar, Uruzgan, Helmand and so many other areas fighting not for global jihad but for independence from foreign interference. There are key differences between the war in Afghanistan and that in Vietnam — but a lack of a broad-based popular insurgency is not one of them.
Tags: Afghanistan · AfPak · Barack Obama · Mullah Omar · Pakistan · Quetta · Quetta Shura · Taliban · US troop surge 2009-2010
Make No Mistake, Pakistan Is At War
November 27th, 2009 · No Comments
Amid daily suicide attacks, the Pakistan Army is closing in on Taliban strongholds — and this time they seem to have the support of the Pakistani people, reports Mustafa Qadri from Islamabad
Pakistan’s once sleepy capital Islamabad has been transformed into something of a fortress, with checkpoints, cement barriers and police dotting the tree-lined streets. There is no doubt about it: Pakistan is at war, and the signs are everywhere. As of last week, the police alone say they have prevented 67 individuals from carrying out suicide attacks, most recently in a dramatic confrontation at a barricade in Islamabad.
Tags: Blackwater · Frontier Corp · Hafiz Gul Bahadur · Jamaat-e-Islami · nuclear weapons · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Seymour Hersh · Taliban · Tariq Khan · Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan · Waziristan · Xe
Long Journey Back to Heaven
November 3rd, 2009 · No Comments
The Diplomat’s Pakistan correspondent, Mustafa Qadri, meets refugees from the conflict in Pakistan’s Swat Valley and finds anger, trepidation and hope as they return home after this summer’s counter-Taliban military offensive.
Travelling along the road leading to the Swat valley is a memorable experience. As the narrow dual carriageway snakes around impossibly steep mountain ranges, the breathtaking vista of snow-capped peaks come into view as they loom over an emerald green valley pierced by the Swat River. It looks too perfect to be natural.
‘The beauty of Swat is unmatched in the world,’ says Ashraf, a Swati villager and journalist who agreed to take me to the region. When I ask if anyone maintains the near perfectly manicured grasslands and pine forests he laughs and shakes his head. Described in local poetry as heaven on earth, for centuries Swat has been home to saints and soothsayers–first those hailing from Hindu and Buddhist traditions, and in more recent centuries mystical Sufi Islam.
Tags: democracy · Friends of Democratic Pakistan · Islam · justice · Malakand · North West Frontier Province · Pakistan Army · Pakistan Taliban · rule of law · Sufi Mohammad · Swat valley · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Nifaaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi · Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan · United States
Is The Misery Ending Or Just Beginning?
October 23rd, 2009 · No Comments
As Pakistan’s new campaign in Waziristan gears up, Mustafa Qadri examines the cost of the war for the increasingly dislocated civilian population
There was a time not so long ago when the violence emanating from Pakistan had a mythical quality. In no region of this troubled country has the hyperbole of terrorism been so thoroughly lathered than South Waziristan, the tribal agency bordering Afghanistan where, since last weekend, Pakistan’s army has been waging a massive campaign against the Taliban’s most robust stronghold.
Tags: Baitullah Mehsud · FATA · Hakimullah Mehsud · Operation Rah-e-Nijat · Pakistan · Pakistan Taliban · Swat valley · Taliban · United States
The war to end Pakistan’s woes?
October 20th, 2009 · No Comments
In the Pakistani army’s offensive against the Taliban in South Waziristan, the line between victims and villains remains unclear
Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 20 October 2009 16.30 BST
The Pakistan army’s invasion of the Taliban stronghold of South Waziristan this week brings few surprises. For years observers in Washington and Brussels have been pressing for an assault on this scale. The army says its aims in Operation Rah-e-Nijat (“Road out of Misery”) are to finally eliminate the main sanctuary for the Taliban and al-Qaida in Pakistan and, according to army chief Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, the foreign and local “elements” that given them succour.
Tags: Ahmedzai clan · Azam Tariq · Bajaur · Hafiz Gul Bahadur · Haikumllah Mehsud · Haji Nazir · Mullah Omar · Operation Rah-e-Nijat · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · South Waziristan · Swat valley · Taliban · United States · war on terror · Wazir tribe · Waziristan
The Names The News Forgets
October 2nd, 2009 · No Comments
Few people take more risks than the locals who help foreign correspondents in conflict zones, writes Mustafa Qadri. So why don’t the Western media give credit to their fixers?
Investigative journalism can be a dangerous profession because, by its very nature, it seeks to uncover the lies and scandals that someone, somewhere, is trying to suppress. As work descriptions go, few civilians face as many life-threatening situations as those who aid foreign investigative reporters in conflict zones.
Generally known in the profession as “fixers” — but very often respected local journalists in their own right — these brave reporters are asked to arrange anything and everything required by a foreign media outlet: from interviews with hostile governments and militants in hiding, to transportation and accommodation. They risk their lives not only by working in dangerous situations but by virtue of fact that, being citizens of developing nations, the western media outlets that employ them generally place little value on their lives.
Tags: Afghanistan · Al Jazeera · double standards · free press · Inter Services Intelligence · Musa Khankhel · NATO · Pakistan · Sami al Hajj · Sultan Munadi · Swat valley · Taliban · United States
A very Indian insurgency
September 16th, 2009 · No Comments
The greatest militant threat facing India comes not from the Islamists who attacked Mumbai but Naxalite Maoist rebels
Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 16 September 2009 09.00 BST
Last November’s fedayeen-style attacks on Mumbai may have reminded the world that India was not immune to terrorism. But few outside the subcontinent are aware that the greatest source of militancy in this diverse country comes not from Islamists but Maoists.
Tags: democracy · double standards · India · insurgency · Kerala · Manmohan Singh · Naxalbiri · Naxalites · Pakistan · poverty · Taliban · West Bengal
A Generation Lost To War
September 15th, 2009 · No Comments
Suicide attacks have become so common in Pakistan that they often don’t even make the Western press. Mustafa Qadri meets the father of a suicide bomber in the country’s North West Frontier Province
Darra Adam Khel, just south of Peshawar in the North West Frontier Province of Pakistan, has always been a dangerous transit zone between Afghanistan, Peshawar, and the southern most regions of Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas. Until recently it was also part of the Taliban heartland.
Tags: Darra Adam Khel · NWFP · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Taliban
Poetry confronts the Taliban in Pakistan
August 24th, 2009 · No Comments
Mustafa Qadri
Last Updated: Mon, 24 Aug 2009 12:24:00 +1000
People in a Pakistani frontier region threatened by the Taliban are trying to preserve a culture rich in poetry and dance from religious extremism.
The culture of the ethnic Pashtun peoples often delights in worldly pleasures – like sex and alcohol – considered un-Islamic by religious conservatives.
Tags: Badaber · freedom of speech · Ghani Khan · Islam · Pakistan · Pashtun culture · poetry · Swat valley · Taliban
Anti-Taliban groups in Pakistan resist cultural crackdown
August 24th, 2009 · No Comments
Much of Afghanistan’s Pashtun-dominated south and east has been tense during for the recent presidential elections, but just over the border in Pakistan, outside Peshawar, the battle rages for cultural control of the community. The Taliban are trying to outlaw traditional poetry and dance, which they consider un-Islamic.
Presenter:Mustafa Qadri
Speaker: Fazal Maula, Peshawar-based non-government organisation
QADRI: Following my travels through northwestern Pakistan where millions fled the war against the Taliban, I met members of an anti-Taliban lashkar or army in the tribal district of Badaber. To describe Badaber as an outpost would be something of an understatement. Both the Taliban and government security forces have wrestled for control of this vitally strategic tribal region. Fazal Maula from a local non-government organisation explains.
Tags: democracy · freedom of speech · Ghani Khan · Islam · Pakistan · Pashtun culture · Taliban
Making Peace With Jinnah’s Ghost
August 17th, 2009 · No Comments
As Pakistan celebrates Independence Day, Mustafa Qadri looks at the country’s unstable beginnings, troubled history and the miracle of its continued existence
“The religious bigot considers me an infidel
And the infidel deems me to be a Muslim!”
With these immortal words, Pakistan’s national poet Mohammad Iqbal captured the eternal quandary that is Pakistan.
The nation created for the subcontinent’s Muslims has always struggle to define itself — is it meant to be an Islamic state or a state for Indian Muslims?
Tags: Bangladesh · colonialism · independence · India · Mohammad Ali Jinnah · Pakistan · Partition · Taliban · United Kingdom · United States
The secrets of Pakistan’s survival
August 14th, 2009 · No Comments
Pakistan has seen rapid change and frequent conflict in its 62 years. Its resilience is a testament to its people
· Mustafa Qadri
· guardian.co.uk, Friday 14 August 2009 19:00 BST
Karachi’s Saddar Town is the frenetic heart of Pakistan’s commercial capital. A retail hub where anything and everything from cameras to salwar kameez can be purchased, it was once the economic gateway into the northern reaches of British India. That legacy is still visible in Saddar’s fading colonial terraces, but the intricate wooden shutters are mostly gone and the Victorian entrances have been converted into street stalls. Today most are too busy trying to survive to notice the heritage.
Tags: Bangladesh · Hinduism · India · Islam · Karachi · Mohammad Ali Jinnah · Pakistan · partition of Indian subcontinent · Sikhism · Taliban · Talibanisation · United States
Reforming the message
August 4th, 2009 · No Comments
Many of the world’s most dangerous Islamic extremists have learnt their approach in Madrassas, or religious schools, that offer a restricted curriculum that fails to reflect the modern world. In Pakistan madrassas also have a reputation for breeding extremists: but a plan to reform them is in motion, writes Mustafa Qadri.
“One cannot deny the very real role played by madrassas in fomenting extremism in Pakistan. I have met several members of the Taliban and a Lashkar-e-Tayaba operative. All had either been recruited or taught at madrasssas.”
Tags: Bareilly · Barelwi · democracy · Deoband · Deobandi Islam · education · International Centre for Religion and Diplomacy · Islam · Jaish-e-Mohammad · madaris · Mufti Usmani · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terrorism · zakaat
The Seminal Influence Of Pakistan’s Madrassas
July 28th, 2009 · No Comments
Frequently demonised in the West as hotbeds of terrorism, Pakistan’s religious seminaries are actually a vital institution, not the evil dens they are made out to be, writes Mustafa Qadri
According to many security analysts and world leaders, Pakistan is the global centre of extremist Islam. Much of that reputation has been built upon the country’s madaris, or religious seminaries (also sometimes referred to as madrassas), which have been described as jihadi factories spreading terrorism internationally.
Tags: Bareilly · Barelwi · Deoband · Deobandi Islam · jihad · Lashkar-e-Toiba · madrassas · Pakistan · Salafism · Taliban · Zia ul Haq
Bringing peace to the troubled frontier
July 25th, 2009 · No Comments
Bring peace to the troubled frontier
Grassroots attempts to foster peace in Pakistan provide hope for communities torn apart by war with the Taliban
· Mustafa Qadri
· guardian.co.uk, Saturday 25 July 2009 16.00 BST
There has been much soul-searching in Pakistan of late, and with good reason. Although the Army claims to have largely pushed the Taliban out of the Swat Valley, the most developed part of the country yet infiltrated by the insurgents, the war continues in all of its brutality and uncertainty.
Even in Swat it is unclear whether the Taliban are really vanquished. The government may have told the millions made homeless by this conflict that it is safe to return, but the army’s inability to eliminate key Swat Taliban leaders and the existence of huge pockets of remote mountainous terrain incapable of ever being properly secured make the possibility of a Taliban return a real threat…
Tags: Aman Tehreek · Aryana Institute for Regional Research & Advocacy · Buner · Islamabad · Malakand · Pakhtoonkhwa Milli Awami · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Pakistan Peoples Party · Swat valley · Taliban
A snapshot of life in Pakistan’s refugee camps
July 16th, 2009 · No Comments
A snapshot of life in Pakistan’s refugee camps
Updated July 16, 2009 11:48:55
Although the fighting in Pakistan’s Swat valley has ended and some refugees have started to head home, many remain wary of returning.
An estimated 2 million fled the conflict between Pakistani troops and the Taliban, and some ended up at a displaced person camp two hours north of the capital Islamabad.
Presenter: Mustafa Qadri
Speakers: Purmanari, displaced person; Mohammad Yahya, a former town mayor; Ziauddin Yousufzai, School teacher; Mannu, school student
Tags: double standards · IDPs · Islam · justice · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Swat valley · Taliban · war on terrorism
Public Unites Against Taliban in Pakistan
July 16th, 2009 · No Comments
Public Unites Against Taliban in Pakistan
Mustafa Qadri | 16 Jul 2009
KARACHI, Pakistan — There has been a perceptible shift in the battle against militancy in Pakistan. The massive army operations that recently concluded in the Swat valley, the largest ever conducted by Pakistan against the Taliban, are but one facet of it. For the first time, the government is also winning the propaganda war.
Tags: Asif Ali Zardari · IDPs · Malakand Division · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Swat valley · Taliban · Yeh hum naheen
Pakistan madrasas: ‘We focus on how to live together and respect diversity’
July 15th, 2009 · No Comments
Pakistan madrasas: ‘We focus on how to live together and respect diversity’
Mustafa Qadri reports on a programme to reform madrasa curriculums in Pakistan
Tags: democracy · education · Islam · madaris · Pakistan · Taliban
Displaced Pakistanis speak out
July 14th, 2009 · No Comments
Displaced Pakistanis speak out
by Mustafa Qadri
16 July 2009
Karachi, Pakistan – Pakistan is in the middle of its largest operation against the Taliban in the troubled Swat Valley and adjacent areas.
Although a small first wave of refugees has begun to return as part of the government’s efforts, up to 2.5 million people are believed to have fled the once quiet, scenic mountain ranges. At a camp in Risalpur, 50 miles south of some of the fiercest battle zones, I spoke with some of the displaced.
Tags: democracy · IDPs · justice · Pakistan · Swat valley · Taliban
Lost Victims Of War
July 8th, 2009 · No Comments
Lost Victims Of War
Mustafa Qadri
As Pakistan announces it has cleared 90 per cent of the country’s north west of Taliban militants, Mustafa Qadri visits the refugee camps sheltering civilians who have been forced from their homes by conflict.
Tags: IDPs · Malakand Division · Pakistan · refugees · Swat valley · Taliban
Interview with Taliban commander from Swat
July 6th, 2009 · No Comments
Late last year I interviewed “Mullah Noor Allam”, a middle ranking Taliban commander from the Swat valley. The interview was published in Australia’s Canberra Times newspaper on 17 January 2009. You can view the story…
Tags: democracy · Islam · Malakand Division · Pakistan · Sharia · Swat valley · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Taliban
The Karachi king
July 6th, 2009 · No Comments
The Karachi king
After a bloody conflict in Karachi, much-feared political boss Altaf Hussain fled to London, but he is no less powerful in Pakistan
o Mustafa Qadri
o guardian.co.uk, Monday 6 July 2009 18.00 BST
o Article history
With his healthy plume of gravity-defying hair and chunky tinted glasses, Altaf Hussain is as colourful in appearance as his reputation suggests. Perhaps no other Pakistani politician has as big a list of enemies as the one-time cabbie and university student who transformed himself into one of the most feared political bosses in the country. That he has directed his Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) party from the distant shores of the UK since 1994 speaks volumes for his enduring influence in the treacherous political life of Pakistan.
Tags: Altaf Hussain · asylum · democracy · Karachi · London · MQM · Pakhtun · Pakistan · refugee · Saudi Arabia · Taliban · United Kingdom
Bigger than bin Laden
June 29th, 2009 · No Comments
Bigger Than Bin Laden Beitullah Mehsud, the man analysts describe as more dangerous than Osama bin Laden, continues to evade death in Pakistan, writes Mustafa Qadri Ever since he was labelled more dangerous than Osama bin laden, Beitullah Mehsud has been the single greatest target of US drone attacks. Remarkably, he has evaded death on [...]
Tags: Beitullah Mehsud · Nek Mohammad · Osama bin Laden · Pakistan · Qari Hussein · Qari Zainuddin · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan · United States · Waziristan
Pakistan’s divided Taliban
June 26th, 2009 · No Comments
Pakistan’s divided Taliban
Despite internal divisions and a bloody army crackdown, the Pakistani Taliban are a long way from being defeated
o Mustafa Qadri
o guardian.co.uk, Friday 26 June 2009 16.00 BST
o Article history
Baitullah Mehsud, the Taliban warlord from Pakistan’s South Waziristan tribal agency, often described as Emir Baitullah, is widely seen as the movement’s leader in the country. For at least the past two years, Pakistani authorities have sought to attribute most of the terrorism that occurs in this troubled nation to him. According to the North West Frontier Province governor Owais Ahmed Ghani, Baitullah is “the root cause of all the evil”.
Perhaps that is why he was targeted in what was probably the latest and deadliest US drone attack in Pakistan. While the strike failed to kill Mehsud, it did leave the charred remains of anywhere between 40 and 100 people scattered amid the wreckage of a South Waziristan mosque. This has become a dirty war, and neither insurgents nor counterinsurgents have hesitated to attack places of worship.
Tags: Beitullah Mehsud · Nek Mohammad · NWFP · Owais Ahmed Ghani · Pakistan · Qari Hussein · Qari Zainuddin · South Waziristan · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Taliban · US missile strikes
Homeless in the mountains of Pakistan
June 19th, 2009 · No Comments
Homeless in the mountains of Pakistan
19 Jun 2009 12:39:00 GMT
Written by: Mustafa Qadri
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author’s alone.
The Pakistan Army is in the middle of its largest ever operations against Taliban forces in the troubled region bordering Afghanistan. Up to 2.5 million are believed to have fled the once quiet, scenic mountain ranges. At a camp in Risalpur, 50 miles south of some of the fiercest battle zones in the Swat valley, I talked to schoolgirl Mannu.
Among the bare dwellings of Risalpur’s industrial area, buildings donated to the displaced by local businessmen that have been transformed into miniature cities, I met eleven-year-old Mannu, a fearless young student unfazed by the traumas that have, for the time being at least, destroyed her ancient village community.
Tags: democracy · internally displaced persons · Malakand Division · Pakistan · refugees · Swat valley · Taliban
Stuck between India and the Taliban
June 18th, 2009 · No Comments
Mustafa Qadri: Stuck between India and the Taliban The idea that Pakistan is inherently dangerous is a mantra used by those who ignore history and avoid the complicated reality According to Kapil Komireddi in these very pages, the demise of Pakistan is “inevitable” because it has since foundation been a source of division and extremism. [...]
Tags: Afghanistan · Bajrang Dal · double standards · fascism · India · Kashmir · Mumbai · North Korea · nuclear weapons · Pakistan · Taliban
The Battle Has Only Just Begun
June 5th, 2009 · No Comments
The Battle Has Only Just Begun
Thanks to massive army operations in the Swat valley, Pakistan’s Taliban movement is in retreat for the first time, writes Mustafa Qadri
Ever since Nek Mohammad began the first insurgency from Waziristan in 2003, the loose confederation of warlords known as the Pakistan Taliban Movement have either advanced or obtained de facto government recognition in large parts of Pakistan’s Pakhtun tribal areas. Before the current Pakistan Army operations in the Swat valley, one analyst estimated that the Taliban had a presence in over 10 per cent of the country.
Tags: Maulana Fazlullah · Maulana Shah Dawran · Nek Mohammad · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Taliban
Don’t write the Taliban off just yet
June 4th, 2009 · No Comments
Don’t write the Taliban off just yet
Although the Taliban is on the back foot in Pakistan, the war is far from over and thousands of civilians have been left homeless
o Mustafa Qadri
o guardian.co.uk, Thursday 4 June 2009 09.30 BST
The Taliban have suffered their heaviest defeat in Pakistan since first erupting into open insurgency in 2003. Before May, the loose network of warlords that have invoked the Taliban franchise here have expanded into large swaths of Pakistan’s Pakhtun tribal areas. Prior to current events, some estimates placed the Taliban in 11% of Pakistan, almost all of that being in the North-West Frontier Province and Federally Administered Tribal Areas that are presently the centre of military operations by Pakistan and the US.
Tags: Maulana Fazlullah · Maulana Shah Dawran · Pakistan · Swat valley · Taliban
The Taliban has no Plan B
May 29th, 2009 · No Comments
The Taliban Has No Plan B
By Mustafa Qadri
The Taliban is stepping up its violent attacks but ordinary Pakistanis have had enough and the organisation is losing popular support, reports Mustafa Qadri from near the Swat valley…
Tags: Karachi · Lahore · Pakistan · Peshawar · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan
Isolating The Taliban
May 28th, 2009 · No Comments
Isolating the Taliban
Violence in Pakistan can only be tackled if the state listens to devastated communities and recognises the Taliban threat
Mustafa Qadri
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 28 May 2009 18.30 BST
It was really only a matter of time before we would see this. A day after a bomb ripped through central Lahore, three explosions rocked Peshawar – two at the famous storytellers’ market, and another near the city’s railway station, destroying significant amounts of property, lives and livelihoods. It is too early to know what motivated these latest attacks in Peshawar. Like so much of the North-West Frontier Province, however, Peshawar businesses, particularly book music shops and women’s clothing stores, have been heavily hit, often after being told to shut for being unIslamic.
Tags: IDPs · Karachi · Lahore · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Peshawar · Swat valley · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan
The human cost of war on the Taliban
May 21st, 2009 · No Comments
The human cost of war on the Taliban
Pakistan’s operations against militants have won praise from Washington but displaced thousands of innocent people
o Mustafa Qadri
o guardian.co.uk, Thursday 21 May 2009 14.03 BST
The latest chapter in Pakistan’s war with the Taliban has been a humanitarian disaster for ordinary villagers from Malakand Agency, the region in Pakistan’s lower Himalayas where the battle is now being fought.
Tags: colonialism · Dir · double standards · Hillary Clinton · Kerry-Lugar Bill · Malakand agency · Pakistan · Swat valley · Taliban · United States
Thousands Displaced By War In Pakistan
May 18th, 2009 · No Comments
Thousands Displaced by War in Pakistan
By Mustafa Qadri and Tahir Ali
Displaced villager
“We are ready to leave [Katcha Ghauri] to make room for our brothers from Swat,” says Kushdhil, who was displaced from Bajaur Agency, to the west of the current fighting. Photo: Mustafa Qadri
Last week a number of quiet mountain villages became part of the deadly frontline in Pakistan’s battle with Islamic militancy, report Mustafa Qadri and Tahir Ali…
Tags: Bajaur · Dir · IDPs · justice · Malakand · Pakistan · refugees · Swat valley · Taliban
Shadowy forces in Karachi
May 14th, 2009 · No Comments
My latest article for NewMatilda.com is on ethnic tensions in Pakistan’s great port city of Karachi:
Shadowy Forces In Karachi
The recent gun battles across Karachi demonstrate that there’s a lot more to Pakistan’s problems than dealing with the Taliban, writes Mustafa Qadri
There were a number of Kodak moments for the presidents of Afghanistan and Pakistan in Washington last week. But back in their respective countries, the world’s media were transfixed by images of civilians suffering from the unending war with the Taliban. In Afghanistan the images were of the horrific bombardment of civilians in the southern province of Farah. And next door in Pakistan, there is little doubt that army operations against the Taliban along the foothills of the Himalayas are having a devastating impact on tribal societies.
Tags: Altaf Hussain · Awami National Party · Karachi · MQM · Pakistan · Taliban
Pakistan’s displaced voice fear and anger
May 13th, 2009 · No Comments
Pakistan’s displaced voice fear and anger
13 May 2009 17:10:00 GMT
Written by: Mustafa Qadri
A veteran of the war against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan rues the misfortune of being homeless in his own country.
Mustafa Qadri in Peshawar and Tahir Ali in Rangmala talk to civilians displaced by a Pakistani army offensive against Taliban militants in the Swat valley that has uprooted hundreds of thousands…
Tags: Bajaur · Dir · IDPs · Katcha Ghuri · Malakand · Pakistan · Peshawar · refugees · Swat valley · Taliban
‘Collateral damage’ in AfPak hurts the US too
May 8th, 2009 · No Comments
The following report for The Guardian, published today, looks at the recent meetings between the Presidents of the United States, Afghanistan and Pakistan in Washington D.C. and the risks to civilians caught up in the war with the Taliban:
‘Collateral damage’ in AfPak hurts the US too
The bombardment of civilians in Afghanistan undermines the security credentials of western forces in the region
o Mustafa Qadri
o guardian.co.uk, Friday 8 May 2009 16.30 BST
The timing may have been a disaster for Washington, but for villagers in Afghanistan’s south it was far worse. A day after a US bombing killed up to 120 civilians in Afghanistan’s southern Farah province, President Obama asked the visiting presidents of Afghanistan and Pakistan, Hamid Karzai and Asif Ali Zardari, to step up their attacks on Taliban and al-Qaida militants.
Tags: Afghanistan · AfPak · Asif Ali Zardari · Barack Obama · colonialism · double standards · Farah Province · Hamid Karzai · Hillary Clinton · Pakistan · Robert Gates · Taliban · war crimes
Kilcullen on Pakistan
May 7th, 2009 · No Comments
Pakistan is not an ally or an enemy—it’s not coherent enough to be either. There is a free judiciary and a free press, but the there’s no civilian control of the army, especially the intelligence services, which have been backing the bad guys.
Tags: David Kilcullen · democracy · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Taliban · United States · war on terror
Behind the Afghanistran propaganda
May 2nd, 2009 · No Comments
Despite Afghanistan’s recent return to the spotlight, few among the public realize the full extent of the US’s historical meddling in Afghanistan. Sadly, many Americans will believe the version of events that were popularized by George Crile’s book-turned-Hollywood film, Charlie Wilson’s War.
Tags: Afghanistan · colonialism · double standards · mujahideen · Soviet jihad · Taliban · United States
Pentagon concerns with Pakistan aid
May 2nd, 2009 · No Comments
It appears the Pentagon is opposed to too much oversight of civilian aid to Pakistan, including a provision in a proposed bill that would prevent aid in the event of a military coup: After promising last month that U.S. aid to Pakistan would no longer be a “blank check,” the Obama administration is attempting to [...]
Tags: Barack Obama · colonialism · Mike Mullen · Pakistan · Robert Gates · Taliban · United States · war on terror
Is Pakistan’s Army a paper tiger?
May 1st, 2009 · No Comments
My column for newmatilda.com this week is on the inherent failings of the Pakistan Army that make fighting the Taliban more difficult:
Is Pakistan’s Army a paper tiger?
They’ve huffed and they’ve puffed but they can’t blow the Taliban down. Why not, asks Mustafa Qadri
The Army is the most powerful force in Pakistan. So why how has a rural insurgency armed with basic weapons managed to overrun so much of the country? That is the question that Pakistanis, as well as many in the international community, are now asking.
Tags: 1947-1948 Indo-Pakistan War · 1965 Indo-Pakistan War · 1971 Indo-Pakistan War · Ayesha Siddiqua · Bangladesh · East Pakistan · genocide · Kashmir · North West Frontier Province · Pakhtun · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Taliban
Good summary of Pak-Taliban war
April 28th, 2009 · No Comments
The Pakistan Army intensified its operation Tuesday against militants in the Lower Dir district in the country’s northwest. The operation, which began on Sunday, has already claimed the lives of 50 militants and 13 security forces. In response, the Pakistani Taliban have suspended their talks with the government.
Tags: Buner · North West Frontier Province · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Swat · Taliban · war on terror
Obama’s new “AfPak” strategy – the view from Pakistan
April 28th, 2009 · No Comments
My analysis of the Obama Administration’s new AfPak policy for the Common Grounds News Service was published today:
Obama’s new “AfPak” strategy – the view from Pakistan
by Mustafa Qadri
30 April 2009
Karachi, Pakistan – People with a hammer only see nails. This well-worn maxim aptly describes the United States’ relationship with Afghanistan and Pakistan over the past several decades. As early as 1954, the United States identified the country as a bulwark against regional encroachment by the Soviet Union when Pakistan received its first substantial tranche of American military and economic aid.
Tags: Afghanistan · AfPak · Al Qaeda · Barack Obama · ISAF · NATO · Pakistan · Taliban · United States · war on terror
Sanctions would only fortify the army’s support for militancy
April 28th, 2009 · No Comments
We’re now seeing a subtle, yet seismic, shift in the War on Terror narrative in Western capitals. The host of a recent CNN discussion on ‘Islamism’ tried to distinguish al-Qaeda from the Taliban, basically arguing that as rigidly conservative and chauvinist as the Taliban are, they are not, like al-Qaeda, interested in open conflict with non-Muslim societies and instead want to establish a ‘true Islamic state’.
Tags: democracy · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Taliban · United States
Taliban suicide bomber-in-waiting
April 28th, 2009 · No Comments
Not everybody is in a position to write a column, but may have a profound experience or perspective to share. In this feature we seek out such people and report back so the Unleashed audience can absorb and discuss unique, fascinating or moving stories.
In our latest instalment of “Unleashed Voices” Mustafa Qadri meets a boy from Pakistan who has trained to become a Taliban suicide bomber.
Tags: Dera Adam Khel · Islam · justice · Kohat · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terror
Pakistani denial over Taliban
April 27th, 2009 · No Comments
In my hometown in Punjab, a businessman friend was inspired by the news from Swat. “If two hundred Taliban take over our town, then we can all start making our own decisions. Who needs this corrupt system anyway?” My friend is a typical middle-class conservative Pakistani, and people in cities across the country share his [...]
Tags: democracy · double standards · Islam · Mohammad Hanif · Pakistan · Taliban
Why they love the Taliban
April 24th, 2009 · No Comments
My latest column for The Guardian, on support for the Taliban in some of Pakistan’s tribal areas, was published today:
Why they love the Taliban
Rampant corruption, and the Pakistani government’s failure to provide, is driving people into the arms of the militants
* Mustafa Qadri
* guardian.co.uk, Friday 24 April 2009 20.30 BST
It may be difficult to understand, but in many of the tribal areas where Pakistan’s ethnic Pakhtun population live, the Taliban are very popular.
Tags: Dera Adam Khel · Hillary Clinton · Kohat · Orakzai · Pakistan · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Nifaaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi · United States
John Kerry: no “real” US strategy for Pakistan
April 24th, 2009 · No Comments
Just back from a visit to Pakistan, Sen. John Kerry says the Obama administration’s plan for that volatile country, rolled out last month with great fanfare, “is not a real strategy.”
Tags: AfPak policy · colonialism · John Kerry · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Taliban · United States · war on terror
Jamaat leader praises pro-Taliban cleric
April 24th, 2009 · No Comments
Addressing a gathering at Friday prayers, the JI Amir said those who speak for Shariah and Islam including Maulana Sufi Muhammad deserve appreciation.
Tags: Islam · Jamaat-e-Islami · Maulana Sufi Mohammad · Pakistan · Syed Munawar Hasan · Taliban
Is Al Qaeda About To Conquer Pakistan?
April 24th, 2009 · No Comments
My latest piece for newmatilda.com is based on a recent visit to parts of the Kohat and Dera Adam Khel tribal areas in Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province where the Taliban has a strong presence:
Is Al Qaeda About To Conquer Pakistan?
Counter-insurgency expert David Kilcullen believes that Pakistan could collapse “within months”. But Mustafa Qadri reports that in the tribal areas, it is actually the Taliban, not al Qaeda, that is gaining traction…
Tags: Buner · Dera Adam Khel · Hillary Clinton · Kohat · Pakistan · Swat · Taliban · United States
Obama’s charm offensive
April 9th, 2009 · No Comments
My assessment of the Obama Administration’s newly announced AfPak policy was published in The Guardian today:
Obama’s charm offensive
Is Barack Obama’s change of strategy – switching focus from Iraq to Afghanistan – a real break with the past?
It was easy to be cynical listening to Barack Obama speak about the “new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan” last Friday. Apart from a vast improvement in elocution, at first glance it was difficult to distinguish his rhetoric from that of his predecessor, George Bush.
Tags: Afghanistan · AfPak policy · Barack Obama · colonialism · Pakistan · Taliban · United States
Getting to Know Your Insurgents
April 7th, 2009 · No Comments
The following article was published in NewMatilda.com today:
Getting to Know Your Insurgents
Much of Pakistan is still trying to understand the mentality of the Taliban fighters who are mounting a worsening campaign of killings across the country, writes Mustafa Qadri
There were plenty of glimpses into the mindset of the Pakistan’s Taliban insurgents last week. On Tuesday a gang of heavily armed men dressed in police uniforms stormed a police training school in Lahore killing at least 12 and injuring close to another 100.
Taliban preys on Pakistani fears
April 6th, 2009 · No Comments
My latest column for The Guardian, on the Taliban and the psychology of fear, was published today:
Taliban preys on Pakistani fears
The Taliban’s extreme version of Islam is the logical conclusion of the region’s violent past and feeds on insecurity
Pakistanis have been offered a frightening glimpse into the true character of the Taliban over the past weeks. Last Monday, 30 March, a group of heavily armed men in police uniforms stormed a police academy killing 11 and injuring close to another 100. Those traumatised police cadets that survived painted a grisly picture of bloodstained walls and body parts. The leader of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, the umbrella network of pro-Taliban groups in the country, Baitullah Masud claimed responsibility for the attack.
Tags: Pakistan · Taliban · war on terror
NATO’s Frayed Supply Line
April 1st, 2009 · No Comments
My analysis of NATO’s supply conundrum in Afghanistan was published on the Foreign Policy in Focus website today:
NATO’s Frayed Supply Line
Mustafa Qadri | April 1, 2009
There was much fanfare as President Barack Obama announced the eagerly anticipated “AfPak” policy review, what the White House terms is “a new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan.” Many have argued, however, that the new AfPak policy is very much a continuation of the old policy with a few tactical grafts from the occupation of Iraq.
Tags: Afghanistan · Balochistan · Chaman · China · ISAF · Kyrgyzstan · NATO · Pakistan · Russia · Taliban · Torkam
Not all terrorists are the same
March 31st, 2009 · No Comments
Here is my analysis of the Obama Administration’s new ‘AfPak’ policy for newmatilda.com:
Not All Terrorists Are The Same
Obama’s new strategy in Afghanistan and Pakistan is much more nuanced than Bush’s “war on terror”, writes Mustafa Qadri. As a starting point, it recognises that al Qaeda and the Taliban are distinct groups
Tags: Afghanistan · AfPak · Al Qaeda · Barack Obama · China · colonialism · democracy · Iran · justice · Pakistan · rule of law · Russia · Taliban · United States
Anything new in AfPak plan?
March 28th, 2009 · No Comments
There’s nothing new in Barack Obama’s foreign policy – but the way it is knitted together offers hope… See also TIME magazine’s appraisal: Did George Bush leave one of his old speeches in the Resolute Desk? As President Obama unveiled his Afghanistan-Pakistan policy Friday, it was hard to miss the echoes of his predecessor’s “surge” [...]
Tags: Afghanistan · Al Qaeda · Barack Obama · colonialism · democracy · Pakistan · rule of law · Taliban · United States · war on terror
Restuarant blast kills 10
March 26th, 2009 · No Comments
This is how the Taliban deals with its opponents: At least 10 people have been killed in a suicide bombing in north-western Pakistan, local officials say.
Tags: democracy · justice · Pakistan · rule of law · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Taliban
Government indifferent as people suffer
March 26th, 2009 · No Comments
If you ever wonder how a group as harsh as the Taliban is capable of getting support from ordinary Pashtuns consider the Pakistan Government’s near total indifference to their suffering in internally displaced person camps: …during three separate trips to Bajaur, we clearly saw the only way they could fight an entrenched Taliban was with [...]
Tags: double standards · internally displaced persons · justice · Pakistan · refugees · Taliban
Don’t mention the war
March 26th, 2009 · No Comments
Here is my report on Australia’s military presence in Afghanistan and Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s visit to the United States this week, published in NewMatilda.com today:
Don’t Mention The War
They managed to avoid the sticky subject of a troop increase. However, despite growing opposition back home, Rudd has backed the Obama Administration’s questionable strategy in Afghanistan.
Tags: Afghan heroine trade · Afghanistan National Army · Al Qaeda · Balochistan · Barack Obama · colonialism · International Security Assistance Force for Afghanistan · Kevin Rudd · NATO · Taliban · United States · Uruzgan
A skewed view of Pakistan
March 25th, 2009 · No Comments
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Tags: Afghanistan · Baloch separatism · India · Inter Services Intelligence · Pakistan · Sikh separatism · Soviet occupation of Afghanistan · Taliban
NGOs ordered out of Swat
March 24th, 2009 · No Comments
First, Sufi Muhammad, the TNSM leader who negotiated the deal on behalf of the Taliban, warned all lawyers and courts in Swat to pack up and leave as the shariat courts with qazis approved by the Taliban leadership will start functioning soon. Now, the Taliban have asked all NGOs in Swat to leave as well. [...]
Tags: democracy · Maulana Sufi Mohammad · Pakistan · rule of law · Swat · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Nifaaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi
In Swat judges told to stay away
March 17th, 2009 · No Comments
The Tehrik-e-Nifaaz Shariat Muhammadi, a militant group, ordered government judges not to show up for work “because we are establishing a true Islamic justice system,” said Amir Izzat Khan, a spokesman. The group is introducing Sharia law in the region as part of a government truce with Taliban fighters.
Tags: democracy · justice · Pakistan · rule of law · Swat · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Nifaaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi
ICG on Pakistan’s militant jihadi challenge
March 14th, 2009 · No Comments
The recent upsurge of jihadi violence in Punjab, the Northwest Frontier Province (NWFP), the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and Balochistan’s provincial capital, Quetta, demonstrates the threat extremist Sunni-Deobandi groups pose to the Pakistani citizen and state.
Tags: Deobandi Islam · FATA · International Crisis Group · NWFP · Pakistan · Sunni Islam · Taliban
Pakistan’s football suffers
March 14th, 2009 · No Comments
It is another irony that as football is the game of poor masses in Pakistan, the teams and players are given the lowest priority in terms of security. Bartalan Bisciki, the noted Hungarian football coach, was selected last month by the Pakistan football association to coach the national team, but he refused to take up [...]
Tags: football · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terror
Peace in Bajaur tribal agency?
March 10th, 2009 · No Comments
A test of progress will be if refugees in camps in Peshawar begin to head home. Despite the military’s declaration of victory against the Taliban in Bajaur late last month, many say it’s still too unsafe to return. Travelers and residents say the Taliban haven’t been flushed from two of nine districts there.
Tags: Bajaur · democracy · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terror
FATA’s Hindus migrate to India
March 10th, 2009 · No Comments
A group of 35 Hindus, nearly half of them women, from Pakistan have crossed over to India and asked the government to allow them to settle in the country, Indian media reported Monday.
Tags: Federally Administered Tribal Areas · Hinduism · Islam · Pakistan · refugees · Taliban
US looks beyond military
March 3rd, 2009 · No Comments
In an admission that its dependence on the Pakistani military has yielded few results against the Taliban, the United States is now seeking to change its relationship with Pakistan – the world’s sole Muslim nuclear power and home of Al Qaeda’s leadership.
Tags: colonialism · Pakistan · Taliban · United States · war on terror
Interview with Sufi Mohammad
March 2nd, 2009 · No Comments
Outlook India has done an interview with Sufi Mohammad which you can read here. Sufi Mohammad is the religious leader who signed a peace deal with the government in Pakistan’s Swat region basically to replace existing, secular laws with the Sharia.
Tags: Malakand · Maulana Sufi Mohammad · Pakistan · Sharia · Swat · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Nifaaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi
Pakistan claims victory against Taliban
March 2nd, 2009 · No Comments
Maj Gen Tariq Khan, the commander of military operations in five of Pakistan’s seven tribal agencies, said his paramilitary Frontier Corps (FC) had driven extremists out of Bajaur, where Pakistani forces have waged a six-month long campaign.
Tags: Bajaur · Pakistan · Pakistan Army · Taliban · war on terror
Swat peace deal still being settled
March 2nd, 2009 · No Comments
Addressing a press conference on Sunday, Sufi Mohammad warned that the TNSM would start setting up protest camps if the Islamic courts were not set up and prisoners not swapped by 15 March… The situation in Swat remains tense and the militants are yet to disarm or end their hold over areas they control.
Tags: Malakand · Maulana Fazlullah · Maulana Sufi Mohammad · Pakistan · Swat · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Nifaaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi
The Return of the Heckmatyar
February 25th, 2009 · No Comments
It was hoped that t he election of Barack Obama to the presidency of the United States would bring a change of course to the beleaguered US effort in Afghanistan. But word that representatives of the Taliban and the infamous Afghan drug trafficker and extremist Gulbuddin Hekmatyar might be on the president’s list of possible [...]
Tags: Afghanistan · double standards · Gulbuddin Hekmatyar · Taliban · United States · war on terror
Taming the Taliban
February 25th, 2009 · No Comments
The following article appears on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Unleashed website today:
Taming the Taliban
Mustafa Qadri
This month the world reacted with surprise and trepidation at the news that Pakistan had reached a peace agreement with religious groups closely aligned to the Taliban. The accord relates to the mountainous Malakand division of the North Western Frontier Province that borders Afghanistan. It covers the beautiful Swat valley, the onetime alpine honeymoon resort, that, since 2007, has been gripped by a Taliban insurgency.
Tags: Islam · Maulana Fazlullah · Maulana Sufi Mohammad · Pakistan · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Nifaaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi · Tehreek-e-Taliban · war on terror
What will this ‘peace’ cost?
February 23rd, 2009 · No Comments
My latest article, on the peace deal between a pro-Taliban group and the Pakistan Government in the mountainous tribal area of Malakand was published in NewMatilda.com today: WHAT WILL THIS ‘PEACE’ COST? By Mustafa Qadri Pakistan has agreed to entrench Sharia law in its North-West Frontier Province in exchange for peace, but locals are still [...]
Tags: Australia · India · Malakand · Maulana Fazlullah · Maulana Sufi Mohammad · Nizam-i-Adl Regulation · Pakistan · Richard Holbrooke · Robert Gates · Swat · Taliban · Tehreek-e-Nifaaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi · Tehreek-e-Taliban · United Kingdom · United States · war on terror
Taliban abduct official in Swat
February 22nd, 2009 · No Comments
Muslim Khan, the Taliban spokesman in Swat, said the group claimed responsibility for abducting the administrator. “He is our guest. We have to discuss some issues with him. We will serve him with tea and then free him,” he told Reuters.
Tags: Malakand · Maulana Fazlullah · Pakistan · Swat · Taliban · war on terror
Truce in Afghanistan acceptable to US?
February 21st, 2009 · No Comments
U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Friday that Washington could accept a political agreement between the Afghan government and Taliban rebels along the lines of a truce in neighboring Pakistan.
Tags: Afghanistan · Pakistan · Richard Holbrooke · Robert Gates · Taliban · United States · war on terror
Shuja Nawaz on the Swat peace deal
February 21st, 2009 · No Comments
Pakistan’s constitution already contains provisions protecting against un-Islamic laws. Why then does the country need an agreement with violent extremists to ensure Islamic laws? And who will pronounce on these laws? The militants? And if the army is to remain in a “reactive” mode, as a government minister explained, will they stand by and watch [...]
Tags: Atlantic Council · Malakand · Pakistan · Shuja Nawaz · Swat · Taliban · war on terror
Obama expands missile strikes
February 21st, 2009 · No Comments
With two missile strikes over the past week, the Obama administration has expanded the covert war run by the Central Intelligence Agency inside Pakistan, attacking a militant network seeking to topple the Pakistani government.
Tags: Al Qaeda · Barack Obama · colonialism · double standards · North Western Frontier Province · Pakistan · Taliban · United States · war on terror
Pakistan signs deal with Islamists
February 19th, 2009 · No Comments
Many Muslims believe that ancient Khorasan – which covers parts of modern-day Afghanistan, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Iran, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan – is the promised land from where they will secure the first victory in the end-of-time battle in which the final round, according to their beliefs, will be fought in Bilad-i-Sham (Palestine-Lebanon-Syria).
Tags: double standards · Malakand · Maulana Fazlullah · Maulana Sufi Mohammad · Pakistan · Swat · Taliban
“It’s like fighting quick sand”
February 18th, 2009 · No Comments
Here, published in NewMatilda.com today, is an analysis of the recent Taliban suicide attack on Kabul and the build of US troops in the country.
“It’s Like Fighting Quick Sand”
As Obama commits another 17,000 US troops to the flagging US war effort in Afghanistan, a commando-style attack by the Taliban in Kabul serves as a reminder of the challenges that lie ahead, writes Mustafa Qadri
Tags: Afghanistan · Hamid Karzai · Kabul · NATO · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terror
Peace or appeasement in Pakistan?
February 18th, 2009 · No Comments
The following piece, on the recent peace agreement between the Pakistan Government and Islamic leaders in the northern Malakand district, was posted on the Guardian Comment is Free website today:
Peace or appeasement in Pakistan?
The recent deal between religious leaders in tribal Pakistan and the government legitimates the Taliban insurgency…
Tags: justice · Malakand · Maulana Fazlullah · Maulana Sufi Mohammad · North Western Frontier Province · Pakistan · Swat · Taliban · war on terror
Missile strikes continue to escalate
February 17th, 2009 · No Comments
U.S. missile strikes in Pakistan have killed more than 50 people in the past three days in what appears to be an escalation of the military campaign in the troubled region along the Afghan border
Tags: colonialism · Kurram Agency · Pakistan · Taliban · United States · war on terror
Moral victory for Taliban?
February 17th, 2009 · No Comments
Pakistan government officials said they struck a deal on Monday to accept a legal system compatible with Shariah law in the violent Swat region in return for peace.
Tags: double standards · Maulana Fazlullah · Maulana Sufi Mohammad · Pakistan · Swat · Taliban · war on terror
Amnesty criticises neglect of Swat valley
February 16th, 2009 · No Comments
The Pakistani government should act immediately to protect hundreds of thousands of people from insurgents in the Swat valley and elsewhere in the country, Amnesty International said today. See also Amnesty’s “Swat deal threatens human rights”.
Tags: Amnesty International · human rights · Pakistan · Swat · Taliban · war on terror
Holbrooke visits Kabul
February 13th, 2009 · No Comments
Famed for negotiating the 1995 Dayton accord that ended the war in Bosnia, Holbrooke is a relative newcomer to South Asian politics. Before two private visits since 2006, Holbrooke had only traveled to Afghanistan once, as a backpacker in 1971.
Tags: Afghanistan · Kabul · Pakistan · Richard Holbrooke · Taliban
Pakistan says talk to Taliban
February 13th, 2009 · No Comments
Pakistan advised President Barack Obama’s special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan on Tuesday to reach out to reconcilable elements of the Taliban movement as part of a strategy for peace in the region.
Tags: Afghanistan · Pakistan · Richard Holbrooke · Taliban · United States · war on terror
No military solution for Afghanistan
February 11th, 2009 · No Comments
And I gave an example of the fact that USAID had built forty-one courthouses at a cost of over $200 million, and the day the US ambassador went to the minister of justice to sort of hand over these courthouses, the minister of justice knew nothing about it and said, “Well, that’s very nice, that’s [...]
Tags: Afghanistan · Barack Obama · colonialism · democracy · Taliban · war on terror
The Taliban’s Lucrative Line In Logistics
February 6th, 2009 · No Comments
My latest piece, on the disruptions to NATO supplies through Pakistan, was published at NewMatilda.com today:
THE TALIBAN’S LUCRATIVE LINE IN LOGISTICS
The lifeline to the war in Afghanistan is under threat, writes Mustafa Qadri, as trucking companies are forced to bribe militants to get supplies in to the troubled region…
Tags: Afghanistan · NATO · North Western Frontier Province · Pakistan · Taliban
Pakistan Taliban to relax ban on girls schools?
January 31st, 2009 · No Comments
Maulana Fazlullah, chief of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Swat chapter, on Friday announced relaxation in the ban on girls’ education by allowing students to attend school up-to fourth grade.
Tags: democracy · justice · Maulana Fazlullah · Swat · Taliban · Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan · women's rights
From War on Terror to Plain Old War
January 30th, 2009 · No Comments
My latest article, on US policy towards Afghanistan and Pakistan under President Obama, was published in NewMatilda.com today:
From War on Terror to Plain Old War
Early signs suggest an escalation of the Bush administration’s policies on Afghanistan and Pakistan under the new President, writes Mustafa Qadri
Tags: Afghanistan · Barack Obama · colonialism · double standards · Hamid Karzai · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terror
Descent into chaos
January 26th, 2009 · No Comments
Across much of the North-West Frontier Province—around a fifth of Pakistan—women have now been forced to wear the burqa, music has been silenced, barbershops are forbidden to shave beards, and over 140 girls’ schools have been blown up or burned down. In the provincial capital of Peshawar, a significant proportion of the city’s elite, along [...]
Tags: Afghanistan · Ahmed Rashid · Asif Ali Zardari · Pakistan · Taliban
Taliban spread fear by radio
January 25th, 2009 · No Comments
Every night around 8 o’clock, the terrified residents of Swat, a lush and picturesque valley a hundred miles from three of Pakistan’s most important cities, crowd around their radios. They know that failure to listen and learn might lead to a lashing — or a beheading.
Tags: democracy · Pakistan · Swat · Taliban · war on terror
Women face brunt of Taliban
January 18th, 2009 · No Comments
In a dark echo of Taliban rule in Afghanistan, violent religious extremists in Pakistan are moving to restrict girls’ education as they seek to impose a draconian version of Islamic law on a beleaguered population.
Tags: double standards · Pakistan · Peshawar · Swat · Taliban · war on terrorism · women's rights
Ten myths about Pakistan
January 5th, 2009 · No Comments
Here are some common assumptions about Pakistan and its citizens that I have come across in the Indian media…
Tags: Asif Ali Zardari · India · Inter Services Intelligence · Pakistan · Pervez Musharraf · Taliban · war on terrorism
Pakistan’s Islamist challenge
January 5th, 2009 · No Comments
These groups have given sanctuary to the Afghan Taliban and al-Qaeda forces that fled Afghanistan after the U.S. invasion. They now fight alongside them against the United States and its allies in Afghanistan. They too consider themselves Pakistani nationalists. In the midst of the crisis triggered by the attacks on Bombay, Baitullah Masud, the leader [...]
Tags: Afghanistan · Beitullah Mehsud · Mumbai · Pakistan · Taliban · Tehrik-e-Taliban
Taliban ban girl schools
January 2nd, 2009 · No Comments
“He said we must take our daughters out of all schools – private or public – by 15 January 2009 at the latest. Failing this, he said the schools will be bombed and violators would face death. He also said they will throw acid into the faces of our daughters if we don’t comply, like [...]
Tags: Pakistan · Swat · Taliban
Why Pakistan’s army gun shy
January 1st, 2009 · No Comments
The problems started after September 11, when the US forced the then-military government of president General Pervez Musharraf to abandon the Taliban. Up to 2001, Afghanistan had virtually been a fifth Pakistani province for which Pakistan arranged day-to-day expenditures. Even the communications network was run by the Pakistan Telecommunication Corporation Limited.
Tags: Afghanistan · India · Jamat-ud-Dawa · Lashkar-e-Toiba · Mumbai · Pakistan · Taliban · United States · war on terrorism
Iran helps NATO in Afghanistan
January 1st, 2009 · No Comments
Meanwhile, NATO is looking to protect its supply lines and might have found assistance from Iran, which would reduce its dependence on Pakistan, where supply lines have come under heavy attack.
Tags: India · Iran · Israel · Mumbai · NATO · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terrorism
What to expect for 2009
January 1st, 2009 · No Comments
Two major events are likely to mark the beginning of 2009 and decide the new rules of war and peace in the region. In Pakistan, the foremost is curtailing the powerful military dominated intelligence agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), and the second is the unveiling of a new strategy in Afghanistan.
Tags: Afghanistan · India · Lashkar-e-Toiba · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terrorism
Afghanistan and Pakistan take centre stage
December 25th, 2008 · No Comments
Afghanistan and Pakistan Take Centre Stage Called ‘the central front’ by Barack Obama, Pakistan and Afghanistan have endured another year of turmoil, writes Mustafa Qadri. My latest piece for The Diplomat magazine is a review of the political and security situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan this year. It is available on subscription from their website [...]
Tags: Afghanistan · Asif Ali Zardari · Hamid Karzai · Pakistan · Pervez Musharraf · Taliban · United States · war on terrorism
More deaths from US strikes
December 23rd, 2008 · No Comments
The unmanned drones have carried out over 30 missile attacks in the tribal region over the past three months, killing over 200 people.
Tags: Pakistan · Taliban · United States · Waziristan
Peshawar terrorism weakens Pakistan’s case
December 8th, 2008 · No Comments
The latest Peshawar blast was a sectarian crime but it has ended up killing indiscriminately Muslims of all sects.
Tags: double standards · Pakistan · Peshawar · sectarianism · Shia-Sunni · Taliban
Interview on ABC Radio National – December 4, 2009
December 4th, 2008 · No Comments
I was interviewed by Phillip Adams on ABC Radio National tonight on the recent Mumbai attacks, sentiments in Pakistan, and an interview I conducted with a Taliban commander from the Swat valley. You can listen to the interview here.
Tags: India · Lashkar-e-Toiba · Mumbai · Pakistan · Taliban
NATO supply line hampered
November 17th, 2008 · No Comments
The recent ambush took place at the entrance to the pass. U.S. officials say the attackers seized two Humvees and a water truck. Several trucks carrying wheat for the World Food Program were also hijacked.
Tags: Afghanistan · NATO · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terrorism
Taliban have no faith in Obama
November 15th, 2008 · No Comments
“For us, the change of America’s president — we don’t have any good faith in him,” said Muslim Khan, a grizzled Taliban spokesman…
Tags: Barack Obama · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terrorism
Embedded with the Pakistan army
November 10th, 2008 · No Comments
“It’s a guerrilla war in a built-up area and forest, against a strongly held defence line held by people who are invisible…”
Tags: Bajaur · Pakistan Army · Taliban · war on terrorism
Not so covert operations
November 10th, 2008 · No Comments
The following piece, on the Bush Administration’s policy of unilateral strikes on suspected militant hideouts, appears in today’s NewMatilda.com: Not So Covert Operations By Mustafa Qadri In its last days in office, the Bush Administration is hurriedly escalating the so-called war on terrorism, writes Mustafa Qadri The election last week of Barack Obama as President [...]
Tags: Barack Obama · George Bush · Pakistan · Syria · Taliban · United States · US unilateralism · Waziristan
Terrorists for sale
November 10th, 2008 · No Comments
“Terrorists for sale” The Diplomat magazine Nov/Dec 2008
Tags: propaganda · Taliban · war journalism · war on terrorism
Is it time to make peace with the Taliban?
October 31st, 2008 · No Comments
The following article, on a peaceful resolution of the war with the Taliban in Afghanistan, was published in today’s NewMatilda.com:
31 Oct 2008
Is It Time to Make Peace With The Taliban?
The once unthinkable is quietly becoming thinkable in Afghanistan, writes Mustafa Qadri
“You are with us, or you are with the terrorists,” declaimed President George Bush in his now infamous speech to Congress following the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.
Now, the US is thinking of talking to the terrorists.
Tags: Afghanistan · double standards · lashkars · Pakistan · Taliban · United States · war on terrorism
US about to talk to Taliban?
October 30th, 2008 · No Comments
The U.S. is actively considering talks with elements of the Taliban, the armed Islamist group that once ruled Afghanistan and sheltered al Qaeda, in a major policy shift that would have been unthinkable a few months ago.
Tags: Afghanistan · double standards · Hamid Karzai · Saudi-Afghan peace talks 2008 · Taliban · United States
Do the tribes really need more guns?
October 29th, 2008 · No Comments
The following article was published in the Guardian newspaper’s ‘Comment is Free’ website today:
Do the tribes really need more guns?
Arming tribal militias to fight the Taliban in Pakistan doesn’t solve the underlying problem
[Wednesday October 29 2008 21.00 GMT]
It’s back to the future with Pakistan’s latest response to the Taliban insurgency. With endorsement and limited training from the US, and Chinese-manufactured weapons, Pakistan will arm tribal militias, or lashkars, to fight the Taliban.
Tags: Afghanistan · double standards · Pakistan · Taliban · United States · war on terrorism
The Taliban’s war on women’s education
October 23rd, 2008 · No Comments
The following article, based on my visit to parts of Pakistan’s tribal agencies, was posted on Reuters AlertNet today:
The Taliban’s war on women’s education
For well over a decade the Taliban have been known for their strong opposition to the participation of women in public life. Their rule over most of Afghanistan until 2001 was marked by a complete prohibition on women in the workforce or at educational facilities either as teachers or students….
Tags: Bajaur · Dir · double standards · Pakistan · Swat · Taliban · war on terrorism
Saudis confirm peace talks with Taliban
October 22nd, 2008 · No Comments
Saudi Arabia has confirmed for the first time that it’s been sponsoring talks between the Afghan government and Taliban insurgents. “We will not negotiate with terrorists but we do believe in political engagement. We are a political government and we believe in talking to the people who are willing to reconcile.”
Tags: Government of Afghanistan · Saudi Arabia · September 2008 Mecca peace negotiations · Taliban
Swat valley violence shatters education
October 22nd, 2008 · No Comments
My dreams of becoming a doctor have been all but shattered…
Tags: education · Pakistan · Swat · Taliban
Tension in the High Fort
October 22nd, 2008 · No Comments
The following piece on Peshawar, Pakistan’s besieged border capital, was published in today’s NewMatilda.com:
Tension in the High Fort
By Mustafa Qadri
Close to Taliban-controlled regions and under pressure from the US, Peshawar’s residents daily negotiate the contradictions of Pakistani life, writes Mustafa Qadri from the North Western Frontier Province…
Tags: Pakistan · Peshawar · Richard Boucher · Taliban · United States · war on terrorism
Afghans search for peace own way
October 20th, 2008 · No Comments
“We need to pressure the Afghan government and the international community to find a solution without using guns.”
Tags: Afghanistan · peaceful conflict resolution · Taliban
Accepting facts on the ground
October 14th, 2008 · No Comments
Taliban leader Mullah Omar promised at the 11th hour in those fateful days from his hideout in Kandahar via Pakistani intermediaries – that, yes, he would verifiably sequester his movement from al-Qaeda and ask Osama bin Laden to leave Afghan soil, provided the US acceded to his longstanding request to accord recognition to his regime [...]
Tags: Afghanistan · conflict resolution · Taliban · United States · war on terrorism
Saleem Shahzad on Pakistan’s dilemma
October 14th, 2008 · No Comments
Last week, in a special briefing session of a Senate committee, Pakistani Secretary of Defense Kamran Rasool briefed lawmakers on the recent dynamics of Pakistani support for the “war on terror”. Rasool openly admitted that Pakistan does not have any option but to follow US dictates, whatever they may be, because the country would collapse [...]
Tags: Pakistan · Saleem Shahzad · Taliban · United States · war on terrorism
A strategy destined to fail?
October 9th, 2008 · No Comments
“A strategy destined to fail?” Guardian: Comment is Free 9 October 2008
A major new intelligence estimate by US defence establishment casts doubt on military strategy in Afghanistan.
Tags: Afghanistan · conflict resolution · NATO · Taliban · United States · war on terror
Pakistan, United States: Brink of War?
October 2nd, 2008 · No Comments
“Pakistan, United States: Brink of War?” Foreign Policy in Focus 2 October 2008
“As the United States steps up border raids into Pakistan, troops from both countries have commenced a deadly game of brinksmanship. Although aimed at asserting each other’s military presence along the Pakistan-Afghan border, the skirmishes risk outright hostilities.”
Tags: Al Qaeda · Pakistan · Taliban · United States · war on terrorism
Taliban force locals to fight
September 27th, 2008 · No Comments
Militants battling security forces in a tribal region bordering Afghanistan have forced families to give up sons to fight alongside Islamist extremists, a Pakistani military official said.
Tags: Bajaur Agency · Pakistan · Taliban · war on terrorism
Talk to the Taliban?
September 27th, 2008 · No Comments
“They have to talk to Mullah Omar, certainly – not maybe, and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and the Haqqani group,” Mr Ghani told The Daily Telegraph in an interview in Peshawar.
Tags: Pakistan · Taliban · talking to terrorists · United States · war on terrorism
Beyond violence in Pakistan
September 22nd, 2008 · No Comments
“Beyond violence in Pakistan” NewMatilda.com 22 September 2008
Tags: Al Qaeda · Asif Zardari · Islamabad Marriott bombing · Pakistan · Taliban · United States · war on terrorism
I got mentioned on Reuters
September 19th, 2008 · No Comments
Time for (another) shameless self-promotion. Sanjeev Miglani at the Reuters Blog mentioned my article here. Quite apart from that, I do enjoy Sanjeev’s reporting which is particularly surprising given it comes from a corporate news outlet. Interesting to see the diversification of news content now that the internet, and blogs, have displaced newspapers as the [...]
Tags: Pakistan · Reuters · Taliban
Must see documentaries
September 19th, 2008 · No Comments
The Real News Network has an excellent series of mini-documentaries on the US/Pakistan war against the Taliban along the border with Afghanistan. You can check them out here.
Tags: Pakistan · Taliban · The Real News Network · United States
The Taliban’s War Against Muslims
September 1st, 2008 · 3 Comments
“The Taliban’s War Against Muslims” NewMatilda.com 1 September 2008
(The Taliban claims to be a Muslim movement but most of its victims are Muslims, writes Mustafa Qadri from Islamabad)
Tags: Islam · Jamiat-e-Ulema Islami · Nawaz Sharif · NWFP · Pakistan · Sufism · Taliban · United States
Taliban continues war on women
August 4th, 2008 · No Comments
By destroying girls’ schools in Swat and Quetta.
Tags: crimes against women · fundamentalism · Pakistan · Quetta · Swat · Taliban
Is Pakistan helping Islamic militants?
August 1st, 2008 · No Comments
In a demonstration of growing U.S. frustration, the CIA’s deputy director flew to Islamabad this month to warn Pakistani officials that they need to do more to address dangerous ties between the country’s spy agency and resurgent Al Qaeda-linked militants, a U.S. official said Tuesday.
Tags: Al Qaeda · hypocrisy · Inter-Service Intelligence · Pakistan · Taliban · terrorism