Targeting shrines

The fact now is that we have stability in no corner of our country. Karachi and Balochistan have multiple problems.


Editorial April 04, 2011
Targeting shrines

The terrible pattern of death we have seen time and again over the past few years, continues. Our shrines, the Sufi saints buried inside them and the peaceful way of life they preached, have emerged as a prime target for attack. This time the shrine of 13th Century Saint Ahmed Sultan, widely known as Sakhi Sarwar, was struck, about 40 kilometres outside the city of Dera Ghazi Khan. As in other cases, the two young bombers who detonated themselves within minutes of each other, and the men behind them who plan such attacks, ensured they would claim the maximum possible number of lives by striking during the annual ‘urs’ of the saint. Around 44 devotees died, over 120 are injured and terror has replaced the mix of tranquility and festivity that marks such occasions. A third bomber, aged we are told a mere 15 or 16 years, has been arrested. Like those whose funeral prayers are being read, the bombers, too, are victims of ruthless men who have made death their trade. 

This latest attack, too, comes in Punjab. The fact now is that we have stability in no corner of our country. Karachi and Balochistan have their sets of multiple problems; terrorism grows rapidly in Punjab and persists in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. There are reports that the Punjab government had received intelligence reports of a planned attack on a shrine. If this is true, we can only wonder, as we have before, why action was not taken or why, given the extensive intelligence that seems to come in, no authority acts against the outfits behind the killings. They remain shadowy entities whose structures are unclear. This is especially true in Punjab. Capturing the bombers themselves serves only a limited purpose. The real need is to identify the groups involved in these deadly acts of bombing, deploy intelligence assets so that they can penetrate their cadres and leadership structures and help the state in destroying them. This is the way counter terrorism is conducted in countries where such measures have had some degree of measureable success. Regrettably, and this is no secret, the violence and mayhem that we see today is the fallout of our own disastrous policies and ill-advised support of non-state actors, thinking they will help us in our efforts to outsmart our neighbours.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 5th,  2011.

COMMENTS (4)

Ameer Hamza | 13 years ago | Reply Punjab government is led by Shahbaz Sharif and Nawaz Sharif, both of whom believe in the fanatical Wahabism imported from Saudi Arab. And why not. They've spent their best years in their country and if there is one thing they have learned from the Saudis is that they hate mazars of the Sufis due to whom we are all Muslims. Unfortunately, these Sharif brothers have begun a new chapter in Sufi Punjab by promoting this culture of hatred for Sufis and their Shrines, visited by thousands of followers daily across the province and the country. The root of the problem lies with the top government officials.
Aslam | 13 years ago | Reply It seems that the Punjab Government is quite indifferent to the problem of hitting the shrines in the province. Why they turned a blind eye to the intelligence reports?
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