Pakistan to implement sharia law in Swat
Pro-Taliban leaders have long called for Islamic law to be implemented in northwest Pakistan [AFP]
Date: 2/17/2009 3:39:54 AM ( 15 y ) ... viewed 1658 times
News CENTRAL/S. ASIA
Pakistan army 'holds fire' in Swat
Pro-Taliban leaders have long called for Islamic law to be implemented in northwest Pakistan [AFP]
Pakistan's military has said it will cease operations against pro-Taliban fighters in the Swat valley after the country's government and armed groups reached an agreement on Islamic law being used there.
The pledge on Tuesday by the armed forces came a day after provincial ministers and a pro-Taliban religious group signed a deal agreeing on sharia courts being set up in northwest Pakistan.
"The army works on the government's orders. The government has given it orders to hold fire. The army will not take any offensive action," Major-General Athar Abbas, chief military spokesman, said.
"The army went there [Swat] at the request of the government. Whenever the government feels normalcy has been restored and the writ of government has been re-established, it will leave."
Sharia deal
The agreement between Islamabad and local pro-Taliban fighters was reached after talks in Peshawar between members of Tahrik-e-Nafiz Shariat Muhammadi and officials of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) government on Monday.
The Tahrik-e-Nafiz Shariat Muhammadi, or the Movement for the Enforcement of Islamic Law, has long demanded the implementation of sharia in the region.
In depth
Swat: Pakistan's lost paradise
Announcing the decision to restore sharia, a spokesman for the NWFP government said Asif Ali Zardari, the Pakistani president, had already agreed in principle to the concession to the region's religious conservatives.
Officials gave few details of the kind of sharia they were planning to implement in the Malakand region, which includes Swat valley, but said that laws that fail to comply with Islamic texts would be suspended.
"All un-Islamic laws related to the judicial system, those against the Quran and Sunnah, would be subject to cancellation and considered null and void," an NWFP spokesman said in a statement following the talks.
The Pakistani government has also agreed its troops will refrain from launching military operations in Swat as part of the deal.
Fight for sharia
Conservative groups aiming to introduce sharia have been fighting government troops in the region since 2007.
The groups took control there after a 2008 peace deal collapsed within months of being signed.
Much of the violence, which has left hundreds of thousands of people homeless, has been blamed on the Taliban in Swat, headed by Mullah Fazlullah, the son-in-law of Maulana Sufi Muhammad, the leader of Tahrik-e-Nafiz Shariat Muhammadi.
Al Jazeera's Kamal Hyder, explaining that sharia had been implemented in the region before, pointed out that the majority of people in the area were very conservative.
Residents wanted sharia because they say the justice is swifter, our correspondent said.
He pointed out that judges would still be appointed by Pakistan's government.
The US, which is battling Taliban and al-Qaeda groups in the area, has previously said that such deals only serve to allow fighters to regroup.
US reaction
A senior US defence department official, speaking on condition of anonymity, called the sharia deal a "negative development".
Tommy Vietor, a White House spokesman, said later that US officials had read the reports and were "in touch with the government of Pakistan about the ongoing situation in Swat".
Speaking in India, Richard Holbrooke, the US special envoy to the region, did not directly address Pakistan's move but said the rise of the Taliban in Swat underscored the point that "India, the US and Pakistan all have a common threat now".
"I talked to people from Swat and they were frankly quite terrified ... Swat has really deeply affected the people of Pakistan," he said.
Failed agreements
Critics expressed doubt that the deal would stop the violence in the region, pointing out that similar agreements in the past had broken down, the latest one in August, and only allowed fighters to regroup and rearm.
"It will mean that the government is ceding territory to the Taliban, which will be a repeat of what happened when prime minister Benazir Bhutto was in power in 1994"
Shuja Nawaz, analyst,
South Asia Centre
Shuja Nawaz, a strategic analyst with the South Asia Centre, told Al Jazeera that the agreement could prove problematic for Pakistan in future.
"It will mean that the government is ceding territory to the Taliban, which will be a repeat of what happened when Benazir Bhutto was in power in 1994 and a number of districts in Swat and Malakand were handed over to essentially the same group so they could impose their rather convoluted view of sharia on those districts," he said.
"The moment you cede space to them, the Taliban will want to extend that control and then the government will have to go through this business of sending in the military yet again to clear and hold the territory."
Pakistan says that force alone cannot defeat all opposition groups and that talks must take place, although several past deals have failed.
Unlike regions under tribal rule in the northwest, where al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters have found havens to launch attacks both in Pakistan and Afghanistan, the Pakistani government has typically controlled Swat.
Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
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