KARACHI, Jan 13: The ongoing hunt for Al Qaeda has become a humanitarian disaster for half-a-million people of Chitral. This winter they are not allowed to use the alternative Kunar-Nawa pass route, passing through Afghanistan, to travel to and from the rest of the country as the Lowari Pass remains closed.

The residents of this remotest district, disappointed by the successive governments’ unfulfilled promises of providing an all- weather route, had been using unhindered the route via Afghanistan for almost a decade.

The Lowari Pass is closed each year from December to May due to a heavy snowfall on the 12,000-foot pass. This year when it was closed to all types of traffic on Dec 8, the local traders suddenly found themselves unprepared to stockpile even commodities of daily use when they learned that they could no longer use the route through Afghanistan.

The District Nazim of Chitral, Shahzada Mohiuddin, told Dawn that he had warned the authorities in Islamabad of the impending problem. He said the authorities he had approached to express his fears included the Foreign Office, the home department and the Frontier Corps. In addition, he contacted the governor of Afghan province of Kunar after getting a nod from the Afghan embassy and consulate in Peshawar to seek the opening of the Kunar route.

After a month’s efforts, he added, when traffic finally started to ply, Chitrali passengers had to undergo a 14-hour arduous journey through the dilapidated roads of Kunar but to their dismay, on reaching the Pakistan border posts they were meted out a worst kind of treatment at the Nawa Pass and then in Arandu and Mirkhani at the hands of the Frontier Corps personnel.

According to the Nazim, the FC personnel seized even items such as children’s toys and tissue papers from the weary passengers under the pretext of the ongoing war on terrorism, and harassed the Chitrali shopkeepers.

“My entire efforts of a whole month have come to a naught as one call from the higher-ups to the FC officials at the borders led to the complete closure of the Kunar route,” Shahzada Mohiuddin said. “The people of Chitral have become hostage to a conflict that was not of their making.”

The authorities both at the centre as well as in the province continue to imagine that the district government alone would be able to come up with a panacea for half-a-century of broken promises made to the disillusioned public, he said, adding that the authorities by their inaction had failed to conceal their indifference to the grave humanitarian crisis.

Fate continues to play a cruel joke with the Chitralis as at times of emergency they cannot even take the sick to hospitals out of the valley for timely treatment. Besides, all economic activities have come to a standstill as the blocked roads have sent prices of essential items skyrocketing.

Air link through the Fokker flights has been the only source of communication with the rest of the country but that is also subject to weather conditions.

When a select few vehicle owners from Kunar request the Pakistan government to allow them to operate their vehicles between Chitral and Kunar province as a goodwill gesture in return for the free passage to the entire residents of Chitral, the requests falls on deaf ears and is promptly turned down despite the fact that close to 120,000 illegal vehicles continue to travel in other five districts of the Malakand division.

Shahzada Mohiuddin demanded an emergency meeting of the Frontier Corps, the home department, federal and provincial government officials with the Afghan council, also to be attended by the Nazim, the MNA and the MPAs of the district, to discuss the existing problems faced by the people on a war-footing.

The district Nazim also appealed to President Gen Pervez Musharraf, Prime Minister Zafarullah Khan Jamali, NWFP Governor Syed Iftikhar Hussain Shah Gilani and Chief Minister Akram Khan Durrani to put the issue higher on their list of problems to be solved so that the sufferings of the people of Chitral end.

Opinion

From hard to harder

From hard to harder

Instead of ‘hard state’ turning even harder, citizens deserve a state that goes soft on them in delivering democratic and development aspirations.

Editorial

Canal unrest
Updated 03 Apr, 2025

Canal unrest

With rising water scarcity in Indus system, it is crucial to move towards a consensus-driven policymaking process.
Iran-US tension
03 Apr, 2025

Iran-US tension

THE Trump administration’s threats aimed at Iran do not bode well for global peace, and unless Washington changes...
Flights to history
03 Apr, 2025

Flights to history

MOHENJODARO could have been the forgotten gold we desperately need. Instead, this 5,000-year-old well of antiquity ...
Eid amidst crises
Updated 31 Mar, 2025

Eid amidst crises

Until the Muslim world takes practical steps to end these atrocities, these besieged populations will see no joy.
Women’s rights
Updated 01 Apr, 2025

Women’s rights

Such judgements, and others directly impacting women’s rights should be given more airtime in media.
Not helping
Updated 02 Apr, 2025

Not helping

If it's committed to peace in Balochistan, the state must draw a line between militancy and legitimate protest.