Pakistan’s northwestern tribal region, beleaguered for years by terrorism and lawlessness, has seen a decline in militant activities during the past few months as the result of government counterinsurgency operations, a recent security report says.
FATA Research Center (FRC), a non-governmental
organization based in the capital of Pakistan, observed a decline of 19 percent
in violent incidents during the second quarter of 2017 in the semi-autonomous
Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) along the border with Afghanistan.
The report also indicated, however, that banned terror
outfits such as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, Jamat-ul-Ahrar, Islamic State of
Khorasan and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi were still able to carry out terrorist attacks.
The 33-page report is based on terrorism-related data
from all seven FATA tribal agencies covering April through June of 2017. It
focuses on militant attacks and counterinsurgency measures, civilian and
security forces casualties, tactics and strategies used by the militants and
military operations and government airstrikes.
The report details a surge in counterinsurgency measures
by the government during the period and reveals most counterterrorism attacks
were executed in the Khyber Agency.
“Out of 61 counterterrorism operations, 19
intelligence-based operations and three aerial strikes were carried out in the
Khyber Agency,” the report said.
Pakistan’s military launched Operation Khyber on July 4,
aiming to eradicate Islamic State militants in the Khyber Agency’s Rajgal
Valley area. Later in July, Pakistan announced that the first phase of the
operation was completed successfully.
The report says 100 violent attacks were recorded in the
second quarter, down from 119 in the January-March period. Seventy of the
fatalities from terror attacks in FATA region were civilians, including 45 who
died in a twin suicide blast in late June that shook the main bazaar of
Parachinar, headquarters of the Kurram Agency. Another 134 civilians were
wounded, according to the report.
Some security and political analysts say measures taken
by the government are commendable, but that Pakistan needs to make sure to keep
insurgents and militants completely out of business in the volatile FATA
region.
Decrease in numbers, but not severity observed
“Insurgent attacks in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and other border
areas may have decreased in number, but - as demonstrated by the June attacks
in Kurram Agency, which killed over 60 people - not necessarily in
severity," Jonah Blank, senior political scientist with the RAND Corp., a
global policy think-tank in Washington, D.C., told VOA.
“In the past, the Pakistani government has tried to
redirect militant groups towards its own goals rather than actually disarming
them. Both civilian and military officials say that is not the case any longer.
Hopefully, this will be proven true,” Blank added.
Security analysts from Pakistan charge that the recent
statistics are encouraging, though they also warn that the government needs to
ensure the terrorists will not be able to re-establish their networks.
“There had been a drop in militancy in the tribal
region,” Amir Rana, director of the Islamabad-based Pakistan Institute of Peace
Studies, told VOA. “Pakistan’s government and army must now ensure to not allow
the militants and insurgents of different banned terror groups to pave their
way back and regain strength in areas of FATA that have been cleared after the
military operations.”
Khyber Pakhtunwa’s government says the province had been
a victim of terrorism for more than a decade now and has taken solid measures
to curb militancy.
“It’s unrealistic to claim there is no militants’
presence in the province anymore,” Mushtaq Ghani, Minister for Information in
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s government, told VOA, “But we have a strategy in place.
Along with the military operations in FATA, we are working to enhance the
capabilities of police, bomb disposal squads, counterterrorism departments and
the intelligence bureaus.”
U.S. and Afghanistan officials have long accused Pakistan
of being selective in its crackdown on militants. They claim Islamabad targets
only groups, including TTP, that pose a threat to Pakistan's interests, and
overlook other militants who are using the country's territory to plan attacks
on Afghanistan and India.
Pakistan has denied those allegations and claims it is
going after all militant groups operating in the region.
**Madeeha Anwar is a multimedia journalist with Voice of America's Extremism Watch Desk in Washington where she primarily focuses on extremism in the South Asia region.
Follow Madeeha on Twitter at @MadeehaAnwar