Rebuilding trust

Published January 31, 2025

AS my semester ended, I returned to Bajaur, my ancestral town, after about five months. Unusually, though not surprisingly, I discovered that the local people in my village patrol at night as guards to ensure the community’s safety from the menace of Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).

In the aftermath of Kabul’s fall on Aug 15, 2021, the long-feared chaos was inevitable. Nevertheless, the Islamabad-Pindi nexus, with its flawed policies, has always haunted the turmoil-stricken youth of the erstwhile Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata).

The only thing we learn from history is that we never learn from history. The power-play policies of the communist and anti-communist blocs have always plunged us deep into chaos and despair. Nonetheless, the inept decision-makers seem determined not to pursue course correction, nor will they pay heed to the prevailing humanitarian crisis in the Pashtun belt.

Alarmingly, nearly 60 groups have pledged allegiance to the TTP. Compar-atively, the TTP of 2025 is far more potent than that of 2007-08, as evidenced by the escalating violence and strategic assaults over the last few months. The year 2024 was the deadliest and bloodiest, remini-scent of the tragic events of 2013 and 2014. Only recently, the TTP established checkpoints in the Mahmund area of Bajaur under the cover of darkness, checking locals’ CNICs on the main road. Several reports suggest that, despite heavy bombardment in the Banda Malasid area, militants still hold these posts.

The real dilemma lies in the trust deficit between the state and the local population, as the past remains an obstacle to building trust. This issue is far more worrisome than militant assaults because, without the trust of its citizens, how can the state combat the prevailing threat and esca-lating terrorism?

The way forward is simple, requiring policy clarity and consistent enforcement of counterterrorism strategies without discrimination. Rebuilding trust with the local populace is essential.

This can be done by addressing their grievances and ensuring their inclusion in solutions. No power on earth can triumph without the support of its people.

Umair Khan
Bajaur

Published in Dawn, January 31st, 2025

Opinion

Editorial

All out
Updated 25 Feb, 2025

All out

PAKISTAN cricket captain Mohammad Rizwan’s assessment was brutal — it could not have been any other way. At ...
Bearing the brunt
25 Feb, 2025

Bearing the brunt

FOR the past several months, we have repeatedly been told by the prime minister and his cabinet that the government...
Afghan resettlement
25 Feb, 2025

Afghan resettlement

AFGHAN refugees who fled their country after the Taliban took over in 2021, and who hoped to resettle in the West,...
Taliban divisions
Updated 24 Feb, 2025

Taliban divisions

The only workable solution lies in Mullah Akhundzada loosening his iron grip on the country.
Oblivious to drought
24 Feb, 2025

Oblivious to drought

PAKISTAN faces two types of drought: one caused by dry weather or lower-than-normal rainfall, and the other ...
Digital children
24 Feb, 2025

Digital children

AS most parents with young children will agree, the easiest way to pacify a bawling child is to hand them a...