K-P CM doubles down, calls Khyber jirga meeting for Sunday to settle Tirah displacement controversy

Claims tribal elders were forced to evacuate homes during harsh winter despite not agreeing, citing orders

K-P CM Sohail Afridi. Photo: Screengrab

Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Sohail Afridi doubled down on his assertions on Tuesday regarding the controversy over the ongoing movement of people in Tirah Valley and called a jirga for February 1 to settle the debate.

Following a surge in unrest and escalating security concerns, large-scale displacement is underway in Tirah Valley, with thousands of families leaving their homes for safer areas, including Bara and Peshawar.

The situation has caused the federal and provincial government to be at loggerheads with the former rubbishing the notion of planned or forced displacement while the latter has rejected as "misleading and factually incorrect" the federal government's claim that displacement of the residents of the Tirah valley of Khyber district is voluntary in nature.

Earlier today, Defence Minister Khawaja Asif said the current displacement was part of "routine" seasonal migration and added that there was no question of a military operation in the area.

In a video message issued later in the day, CM Afridi said that a jirga in the K-P Assembly comprising all political parties of the province had unanimously approved a 15-point agenda with everyone agreeing that a military operation was not the solution to the problem and terrorism was not being eliminated through operations.

He added that everyone said that the issue should be resolved by sitting together so that permanent peace could be established.

"But they did not agree and it was decided in closed rooms that another operation would be imposed on Tirah Valley. A 24-member committee was formed under the leadership of the corps commander and IG FC (Frontier Corps inspector general). In the 24-member committee, the elders of the Afridi tribe were told to vacate their homes because they could not carry out the operation. The Afridi tribe did not agree with the committee members, but they were forced to vacate their homes in the snowfall season," the chief minister claimed.

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