It seems that the authorities have only now diverted the kind of attention that was needed from the outset towards the important areas of registering madrassas, monitoring their funding sources and activities, monitoring hate speech, including putting a stop to the practice of declaring people belonging to different sects apostates, and cracking down on terror financing. In fact, it is understood that the military has asked the government to pay special attention to the area of eliminating terror finance, a crucial factor that has played a part in fostering militancy in the country. All these initiatives will be important and there is a need to realise that while military force can dismantle terrorist infrastructure, it cannot necessarily eliminate the underlying problems that allow space to terrorists and militants. The provincial and federal governments now need to go beyond issuing statements and drawing up plans to undertake these initiatives, and need to actually start implementing these plans at all levels. Only a united, coordinated effort between the civilian governments and the military will be able to achieve this. This is going to be a long-drawn, tedious effort, but it must be undertaken at the earliest.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 12th, 2015.
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