Lashkars face threats as they aid army against Taliban
Militia leaders feel abandoned by the state which promised funding and moral support.
PESHAWAR:
Dilawar Khan often gets phone calls that would fill others with dread -- threats from the Pakistani Taliban to behead him. He gives his usual response: Not if he kills them first.
Khan, leader of a Pashtun tribal militia, joined forces with Pakistani security forces in 2008 to help them battle a rising tide of militancy. He has lost 82 fighters and barely survived numerous assassination attempts but still stands up to militants bent on toppling the government.
But like other militia leaders, Khan feels abandoned by the state, which promised him funding and moral support, and he even speaks of switching sides.
"It feels like the government just threw us in the ocean to fend for ourselves," said Khan, a round-faced, stern-looking man wearing traditional baggy trousers and tunic.
Pakistan can't afford to lose friends like Khan. It has come under enormous US pressure step up its fight against groups like the Taliban and al Qaeda since Osama bin Laden was found and killed in Pakistan last month.
Islamabad may have to succumb to US demands to open a risky new front against militants in North Waziristan to confront dangerous groups who cross the border to attack American troops in Afghanistan. The US has accused Pakistan of backing some of the most dangerous groups, rather than confronting them, but Pakistan has repeatedly denied these allegations.
The government began encouraging Pashtun tribesmen like Khan to revive traditional militias to take on the Taliban and rally their communities behind the state.
Under a centuries-old tradition, tribes raise militias, or lashkars, in their semi-autonomous regions to fight criminal gangs and enforce their tribal codes.
Many sacrifices, few rewards
The drive has had limited success after the Taliban hit back by killing hundreds of tribal leaders and silencing others.
Critics say Pakistan lacks the resolve and resources to make the lashkars a success. Pakistani officials say the government does its best to support the lashkars.
Khan's plight is typical. He runs a lashkar of 200 men, armed with AK-47 assault rifles and some rocket-propelled grenades, charged with protecting a group of farming villages in Adezai, about an hour's drive from the city of Peshawar. His warriors have made many sacrifices standing up to the Taliban. They left their jobs to operate the lashkar full time. Each fighter's extended family has to pay salaries, buy food, petrol and clothes, a heavy drain on the poor community.
While Khan's frustrations grow, the unpredictable Taliban remain as determined as ever to wipe out his force. About 150 of them attack at a time, sometimes every five days, or they wait five months, keeping Adezai on edge. The onslaughts can last for hours. Khan's morale sunk to a low in March when a teenage Taliban suicide bomber attacked a funeral procession for the relative of a lashkar leader in a nearby village, killing 37 people.
"Out of anger I announced to my people that I will join the Taliban," said Khan, a father of seven. His nearby bodyguards are twitchy, aware that the Taliban have come very close to killing Khan -- in one attack they rocketed his bedroom while he and his family were asleep inside. Khan's fury has eased but he stills sees the government as an unreliable partner.
"Why would anyone else want to form a lashkar around here. It's not worth it," said Khan, 39, whose brother, also a militia leader, was hunted down and shot dead by the Taliban.
Despite such complaints and the pitfalls of the lashkar system, Pakistan is trying to persuade tribal elders to take up arms in North Waziristan instead of meeting repeated US demands to launch an offensive there.
But authorities are unlikely to win over more elders, especially at a time when the Taliban are stepping up attacks on militiamen. "We are not going to raise a lashkar even if the government asked us to," said Malik Din Torikhel, an elder in North Waziristan. "Look what militants are doing in other areas. We don't want to be shot dead or butchered."
Dilawar Khan often gets phone calls that would fill others with dread -- threats from the Pakistani Taliban to behead him. He gives his usual response: Not if he kills them first.
Khan, leader of a Pashtun tribal militia, joined forces with Pakistani security forces in 2008 to help them battle a rising tide of militancy. He has lost 82 fighters and barely survived numerous assassination attempts but still stands up to militants bent on toppling the government.
But like other militia leaders, Khan feels abandoned by the state, which promised him funding and moral support, and he even speaks of switching sides.
"It feels like the government just threw us in the ocean to fend for ourselves," said Khan, a round-faced, stern-looking man wearing traditional baggy trousers and tunic.
Pakistan can't afford to lose friends like Khan. It has come under enormous US pressure step up its fight against groups like the Taliban and al Qaeda since Osama bin Laden was found and killed in Pakistan last month.
Islamabad may have to succumb to US demands to open a risky new front against militants in North Waziristan to confront dangerous groups who cross the border to attack American troops in Afghanistan. The US has accused Pakistan of backing some of the most dangerous groups, rather than confronting them, but Pakistan has repeatedly denied these allegations.
The government began encouraging Pashtun tribesmen like Khan to revive traditional militias to take on the Taliban and rally their communities behind the state.
Under a centuries-old tradition, tribes raise militias, or lashkars, in their semi-autonomous regions to fight criminal gangs and enforce their tribal codes.
Many sacrifices, few rewards
The drive has had limited success after the Taliban hit back by killing hundreds of tribal leaders and silencing others.
Critics say Pakistan lacks the resolve and resources to make the lashkars a success. Pakistani officials say the government does its best to support the lashkars.
Khan's plight is typical. He runs a lashkar of 200 men, armed with AK-47 assault rifles and some rocket-propelled grenades, charged with protecting a group of farming villages in Adezai, about an hour's drive from the city of Peshawar. His warriors have made many sacrifices standing up to the Taliban. They left their jobs to operate the lashkar full time. Each fighter's extended family has to pay salaries, buy food, petrol and clothes, a heavy drain on the poor community.
While Khan's frustrations grow, the unpredictable Taliban remain as determined as ever to wipe out his force. About 150 of them attack at a time, sometimes every five days, or they wait five months, keeping Adezai on edge. The onslaughts can last for hours. Khan's morale sunk to a low in March when a teenage Taliban suicide bomber attacked a funeral procession for the relative of a lashkar leader in a nearby village, killing 37 people.
"Out of anger I announced to my people that I will join the Taliban," said Khan, a father of seven. His nearby bodyguards are twitchy, aware that the Taliban have come very close to killing Khan -- in one attack they rocketed his bedroom while he and his family were asleep inside. Khan's fury has eased but he stills sees the government as an unreliable partner.
"Why would anyone else want to form a lashkar around here. It's not worth it," said Khan, 39, whose brother, also a militia leader, was hunted down and shot dead by the Taliban.
Despite such complaints and the pitfalls of the lashkar system, Pakistan is trying to persuade tribal elders to take up arms in North Waziristan instead of meeting repeated US demands to launch an offensive there.
But authorities are unlikely to win over more elders, especially at a time when the Taliban are stepping up attacks on militiamen. "We are not going to raise a lashkar even if the government asked us to," said Malik Din Torikhel, an elder in North Waziristan. "Look what militants are doing in other areas. We don't want to be shot dead or butchered."