Suicide Terrorism In
Pakistan--2007 - International Terrorism Monitor--Paper No.
351
By B. Raman
There were 56 acts of suicide terrorism
in Pakistan during 2007, resulting in the death of 419
members of the security forces----the majority of them from
the police and para-military forces--- and 217 civilians.
The most important civilian killed was Mrs. Benazir Bhutto,
former Prime Minister. As against this, there were only six
incidents in 2006 in which 46 members of the security forces
and 91 civilians were killed.
2. Of the 56 incidents of 2007, there
were only four during the first six months of the year. The
remaining 52 took place after the Pakistani commando action
in the Lal Masjid of Islamabad between July 10 and 13, 2007,
in which about 300 tribal girls studying in a madrasa
attached to the mosque were allegedly killed.
3. Three events of the second half of
2007 led to a wave of suicide terrorism--- the commando
action in the Lal Masjid and the alleged death of a large
number of tribal girls; the suicide committed by Abdullah
Mehsud, a former inmate of the Guantanamo Bay detention
centre in Cuba, when he was surrounded by the security
forces in Balochistan on July 27, 2007, and the army
operation in the Swat Valley of the North-West Frontier
Province (NWFP) in December, 2007, against the members of
the Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM) headed by
Maulana FM Radio Fazlullah, who had captured de facto
control of it, when the NWFP was ruled by a six-party
coalition of religious fundamentalist parties called the
Muttahida- Majlis-e-Amal (MMA). The coalition quit office in
proterst against Pervez Mushaaraf's action in contesting
re-election as the President from the outgoing Assemblies
elected in 2002. Thereafter, the Army went into action.
4. The largest number of suicide
attacks in a month was in July. There were 15 suicide
strikes between July 14 and 31, 2007--- an average of one a
day. The second largest number in a month was in December,
2007. There were 10, including the assassination of Benazir
Bhutto.
5. There were eight in August, seven in
September and six each in October and November, 2007. One of
the six in October was the unsuccessful attempt to kill
Benazir Bhutto in Karachi on October 18.Of the 52 suicide
attacks in the second half of 2007, five were against
political leaders--- two against Benazir in Karachi and
Rawalpindi, one against some workers of her Pakistan
People's Party (PPP) in Islamabad and one each against Aftab
Ahmed Khan Sherpao, a Pashtun leader of the PPP who had
deserted her in 2002 and supported Musharraf, and a junior
Minister of the pro-Musharraf Pakistan Muslim League (Qaide
Azam). Sherpao was the Interior Minister at the time of the
Lal Masjid raid. He and the junior Minister escaped being
killed. The PPP workers in Islamabad were targeted because
Benazir Bhutto had supported the commando action into the
Lal Masjid.
6. There was one directed against the
Chinese working in Pakistan. In Hub,Balochistan, Chinese
engineers travelling by a bus escaped death when the bus was
attacked by a suicide bomber. There was no attack against
American targets despite a strong anti-US feeling.
7. The remaining 46 attacks were
against targets associated with the Army, the Inter-Services
Intelligence (ISI), the Special Services Group (SSG) and the
Air Force. The police were not the primary targets, but a
large number of them died because they were deployed in
large numbers to protect the targets. Whenever the police
guards suspected anyone and called him for frisking, he blew
himself up.
8. Of the 56 attacks during 2007, 23
were in the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (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 a training centre for middle-level army
officers is located.
9. During the second half of 2007,
there were two calls for suicide attacks in reprisal for the
Lal Masjid raid by Pakistan Army Commandoes. The first was
issued by Maulana Abdul Rashid Ghazi of the Lal Masjid
before he and his student supporters were killed by the
commandoes. The second was by Osama bin Laden in his message
coinciding with the sixth anniversary of the 9/11 strikes in
the US Homeland. The call given by Maulana Abdul Rashid
Ghazi before his death at the hands of the Army had a
greater impact on the tribal population in South Waziristan
and the Swat Valley than the call of bin Laden. The death of
Ghazi was followed by one act of suicide terrorism almost
every day for 15 days.
10. Since the police has not been able
to detect most of these incidents so far, one does not know
for certain how many of these were the outcome of outpouring
of anger by individuals not belonging to any organisation
and how many were orchestrated and co-ordinated by
organisations such as Al Qaeda or the Tehrik-e-Taliban
Pakistan of which Baitullah Mehsud is the Amir.
(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)