The Quetta rampage

How the government deals with the aftermath of these attacks may well be seen as a precursor of things to follow.


Editorial June 16, 2013
A firefighter stands near a burning bus after a bomb attack in Quetta June 15, 2013. PHOTO: REUTERS

Even as the country was reeling from the attack on the Ziarat residency, which was claimed by the Balochistan Liberation Army, as many as 28 people were massacred in Quetta on June 15, in the first major attack since the new government came into office.

Fourteen girls were killed when a female suicide bomber detonated a bomb in the parking lot of Sardar Bahadur Khan university — the only women’s university in the province — and as the 19 injured were being transferred to the Bolan Medical College teaching hospital for treatment, militants laid siege to the hospital for up to four hours, carrying out other attacks till police commandos stormed the building and freed the hostages. The attacks were claimed by the sectarian terrorist organisation, the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi. The blatant targeting of the heritage of the country and a symbol of its early days and the rampage that followed serve as a blatant reminder to the incoming government of the extent of the challenge the terrorists pose and the terrible threat to the ideology and the people of this country they are. Condemnations have, of course, since followed the attacks, with the Senate and the National Assembly passing a resolution condemning it.



We have in the past, of course, seen a similar sequence of events. But one hopes that this time round, with a new government in place, we will see some change in the way matters are handled. We need to see a complete elimination of terrorism from the country for there to be any respite for its citizens. Till then, we are all vulnerable, and as the events of June 15 have shown us, nothing and no one is safe. There appears to be absolutely no room for apologists or those having a soft stance on militancy of any sort. How the government deals with the aftermath of these attacks may well be seen as a precursor of things to follow, and to keep the confidence the electorate have invested in it and follow through on its responsibilities, the government should act to ensure that such attacks are brought an end to with their perpetrators duly punished under the law. It is condemnable that the perpetrators brazenly own the attacks and yet they and their leaders roam free.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 17th, 2013.

Like Opinion & Editorial on Facebook, follow @ETOpEd on Twitter to receive all updates on all our daily pieces.

COMMENTS (2)

Mirza | 11 years ago | Reply

Only extremist fanatic terrorists target women, students, schools and colleges. They have refused to talk despite their supporter's claims that these are simple Muslims. They have waged a war on our population and it is not going to subside by itself. They are only going to gain more and more strength especially after NATO leaves. If we do not eliminate them they certainly would.

Billoo Bhaya | 11 years ago | Reply

Perpetrators were not on the radars of the intelligence agencies, just like OBL. Time to overhaul the police and the courts, too many incompetent people are earning their living on tax-payers expense and not doing their jobs. Time to evaluate them, find their affiliations and those of their families, quarantine them and send them far away for all of their lives. We don't have to be nice to killers and their parties.

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ