AL QAEDA AND NUCLEAR WASTE IN
NWFP: INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM MONITOR---PAPER NO. 410
By B. Raman
Coinciding with the first
anniversary of the Pakistan Army's commando raid into the
Lal Masjid of Islamabad, there has been a fresh wave of
jihadi terrorism in Pakistan, which has reversed the
declining trend seen after the new Government headed by
Prime Minister Yousef Raza Gilani came to office in the last
week of March, 2008.
2. This new wave started
even before the first anniversary with the an Al
Qaeda-admitted act of suicide terrorism outside the Danish
Embassy in Islamabad on June 2, 2008. It has picked up
momentum since then-----particularly since July 3, 2008,
which marked the first anniversary of the siege of the Lal
Masjid by the Pakistani security forces and ultimately led
to the raid into the Lal Masjid.
3. This new wave has
affected tribal as well as non-tribal areas, but the tribal
areas more than non-tribal areas till now. In the tribal
areas, it has affected the Federally-Administered Tribal
Areas (FATA), which are directly controlled from Islamabad
with the help of the Army, as well as the North-West
Frontier Province (NWFP), which is ruled by a coalition
headed by the reputedly secular Awami National Party (ANP).
The ANP has been trying to deal with the situation with the
help of the Frontier Corps (FC), a para-military
organisation of Pashtun tribals trained and supervised by
the Army.
4. The NWFP was badly
affected even last year. Of the 56 attacks of suicide
terrorism during 2007, 23 were in the FATA, 21 in the NWFP,
including four in the Swat Valley, nine in Punjab, two in
Balochistan and one in Sindh. Of the 23 in the FATA, only
two were in North Waziristan and one in the Bajaur Agency,
where, according to the US, the terrorist infrastructure of
Al Qaeda is located. The remaining 20 were in South
Waziristan, where there are no confirmed reports of any Al
Qaeda infrastructure. All the attacks in South Waziristan
came from areas which are controlled by the Mehsuds. In the
areas controlled by other tribes, there were no incidents of
suicide terrorism. Two cantonments saw repeated suicide
strikes--- Rawalpindi (5), where the General Headquarters of
the Army are located, and Kohat (3) in the NWFP where an
Army cadet school is located.
5. The Ministry of the
Interior of the Government of Pakistan has not so far come
out with official statistics relating to suicide and
non-suicide terrorism this year, but according to Hamid Mir,
the highly-respected Pakistani journalist, who works for the
GeoTV, a private TV channel,there have been 25 acts of
suicide terrorism in Pakistan during the first six months of
2008, resulting in 332 fatalities. However, in his
analysis carried by "News" of July 10,2008, he does not
indicate how many of these incidents took place before the
new Government came to office and how many thereafter.
According to official figures released by the Interior
Ministry at the end of last year, there were only four acts
of suicide terrorism during the first six months of 2007.
This shot up to 56 after the Lal Masjid raid. According to
my collation, there were 17 acts of suicide terrorism this
year before the Gilani Government came to office, and there
have been only eight since then, but the number is showing
an upward trend.
6. According to Hamid Mir,
Afghanistan had 160 suicide bombings in 2007 with 836 people
dead and it has had 76 suicide bombings in the first six
months of 2008 with 466 dead. There were seven suicide
attacks in Afghanistan in March 2008 compared to 17 in March
2007.There was a sudden increase in the attacks in June 2008
with 17 suicide bombings compared to just seven suicide
bombings in June 2007. Suicide bombings slightly increased
in areas close to the Iranian border. Kandahar and Helmand
are close to Pakistan while Nimroz and Farah are close to
Iran. There were 15 suicide attacks in Kandahar in 2008
compared to 26 in 2007. There were 15 suicide attacks in
Helmand in 2008 compared to 22 in 2007. There were only
three attacks in Nimroz in 2007 but eight attacks in the
first six months of 2008. Farah is close to the Iranian
border and had just five suicide attacks in 2007 but this
province saw six suicide attacks in 2008. The increasing
number of attacks in areas closer to the Iranian border than
to the Pakistani border is intriguing and has thus far
remained without a satisfactory explanation.
7 .In 2007, one saw
acts of suicide terrorism as well as conventional attacks
not involving suicide terrorism in the tribal areas. The
conventional style attacks were more in the FATA than in the
NWFP, except in the Swat Valley, which is the stronghold of
the Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM) headed by
Mulla Fazlullah. Even though official statistics of
conventional style attacks are not available, one can see
that there has been an increase in conventional style
attacks in other areas of the NWFP too. What one has been
seeing is that the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and other
jihadi groups in the tribal belt not associated with the TTP,
have been emulating the tactics of the Taliban of
Afghanistan, which consist of a mix of suicide terrorism
and conventional guerilla-style attacks. An insurgency-like
situation is developing in the tribal belt in the FATA and
the NWFP, similar to the situation which has been prevalent
in southern and eastern Afghanistan.
8. There has been a
deterioration in the control exercised by the ANP-led
Government, the army and the para-military forces in the
NWFP. This weakening of control is evident in Peshawar too,
where the Taliban and pro-Taliban groups are slowly nibbling
at the outlying areas bordering the FATA. The worsening
situation in the NWFP should be a matter of concern to the
international community since many of the areas where
Pakistan's Atomic Energy Commission stores its nuclear waste
are located there. If these sites come under the control of
the jihadi terrorists, Al Qaeda's search for a dirty bomb
capability could be facilitated.
(The writer is
Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of
India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For
Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com )