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Missile strike on Pakistani Islamic school slaughters 80
By Peter Symonds
1 November 2006
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A devastating pre-dawn missile strike on an Islamic school
in Chingai in the remote Bajaur agency of Pakistan has left at
least 80 students and teachers dead. The attack, which levelled
the buildings and left just a handful of survivors, has provoked
angry protests throughout the country.
Pakistans President Pervez Musharraf claimed responsibility
for the raid, alleging that all of the dead were militants
undergoing training for attacks on US-led forces across the nearby
border with Afghanistan. Anyone who says that these people
were innocent is telling lies, he said.
Local villagers have insisted that children as young as five
were among the victims. One of the survivors, Abu Bakar, 22, told
the press from his hospital bed in Peshawar that only two other
studentsaged 15 and 16were still alive. There
was no militant training in the madrassa, he said. We
had come here to learn Gods religion.
The school was run by cleric Maulana Liaquat who was killed
in the attack. He was a leader of the Islamist Tanzim Nifaz Shariat
Mohammadi (TNSM) and made no secret of his support for anti-US
insurgents in Afghanistan. According to various press reports,
Liaquat had connections to Ayman al-Zawahiri and other senior
Al Qaeda leaders who may have been the prime target of the attack.
However, not one of the allegations against Liaquat and his
students has been proven. Even if the claims were true, there
was no justification for the indiscriminate slaughter that took
place. Yet, in all the international press coverage, there is
a complete absence of any criticism. Under the banner of the fraudulent
US war on terror, it is now accepted that military
forces have a licence to act as judge, jury and executioner.
More than 15,000 people protested against the attack in Khar,
the main town in Bajaur agency, on Tuesday. Angry protesters chanted
Death to Bush! Death to Musharraf! and Anyone
who is friend of America is a traitor! The rally adopted
a verbal resolution to stone to death anyone caught spying for
the Pakistani army or the US government. Smaller rallies took
place in the cities of Karachi, Peshawar, Lahore, Multan, Quetta
and Islamabad, where participants burned American flags and called
for Musharrafs overthrow.
Musharraf and the Pakistani military have gone to great lengths
to deny claims that US forces carried out the attack. Locals told
the media that unmanned US Predator drones, which are capable
of firing missiles, were flying above the village before the attack.
We heard two blasts at about 4.50 am, whereas the Pakistani
helicopters appeared a good 10 minutes later, an eyewitness
told the BBC.
Pakistani military spokesman Major General Shaukat Sultan refused
to say how much US assistance was involved. Intelligence
sharing was definitely there, but to say they [US forces] have
carried out the operation, that is absolutely wrong. Foreign
Office spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam went one step further, rejecting
any suggestion that Pakistan was responding to foreign pressure.
It has nothing to do with any influence or pressure,
she said. It is something that we have done.
Aslams remarks are simply absurd. For months, US officials
from President Bush down have been demanding that Musharraf take
tougher action against anti-US insurgents operating from inside
Pakistan. As attacks on NATO forces inside Afghanistan have escalated,
the demands for Pakistani action have become more strident. US
generals have been particularly critical of a truce struck last
month between the Pakistan government and tribal leaders in the
border area of North Waziristan, saying it has boosted the insurgency
in Afghanistan.
Musharraf, who backed the US-led occupation of Afghanistan
in 2001, has been walking a tightrope. His support for the US
war on terrorism has generated widespread opposition
to his regime, particularly in the border areas where Pashtun
tribes have close ties with their counterparts in Afghanistan.
He sent 70,000 Pakistani troops into the previously autonomous
tribal areas and only signed a truce after the army suffered significant
losses in clashes with local militia.
Given the inevitable wave of opposition, it is not at all clear
why Musharraf carried out the latest attack, or if indeed he did
order it. The government was engaged in negotiations with tribal
leaders in Bajaur to reach a deal similar to that struck in North
Waziristan. According to locals, some of those killed in Mondays
attack had taken part in talks in previous days. A journalist
with NBC News said a formal signing ceremony had been expected
on Monday.
The US-based Stratfor thinktank has suggested it is more likely
that the attack was carried out by US forces or in a joint US-Pakistani
operation. The notion that Pakistani forces would themselves
have carried out the strike does raise an eyebrow. For one thing,
Pakistani forces have not attempted targeted strikes against militants
in this area in the past. Second, it would be highly unusual for
Pakistani forces to carry out such an attack while the government
is engaging in high-profile negotiations with leaders in the tribal
badlandshoping they will prevent the area from being used
by Islamist militants as a safe haven and launch-point for attacks,
especially in Afghanistan.
The American military has carried out such raids before. In
January, US forces used missiles against the nearby village of
Damadola, killing 13 people, including women and children. The
attack provoked outrage throughout the area forcing Musharraf
to insist that the US could not carry out operations inside Pakistani
territory. As far as the US military is concerned, the latest
atrocity had the added advantage of undermining Musharrafs
efforts to reach peace deals in Bajaur and other border areas.
It is quite possible that Musharraf took responsibility for
the attack, rather than admit he had allowed the US to stage operations
in Pakistan. Stratfor commented: From Musharrafs standpoint,
the notion that Pakistani forces carried out a strike against
their fellow citizens is somewhat less damaging than the perception
that he has permitted infringements of national sovereignty. The
problem, of course, is that the public already harbours both views,
to varying degreesand the strongest card Musharraf has to
play in this matter represents only the lesser of two evils.
Whatever the case may be, the prime responsibility for the
latest atrocity rests with the Bush administration. Having created
a quagmire in Afghanistan, Washington, whether directly or indirectly,
is now carrying its war into Pakistan with unpredictable and potentially
explosive consequences for its ally, the Musharraf regime.
See Also:
NATO warns Pakistan's Musharraf
to end covert support for Taliban
[16 October 2006]
Behind the rift between the
Afghan and Pakistani presidents
[30 September 2006]
US threatened to bomb Pakistan
back to "the Stone Age"
[27 September 2006]
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