By
Tushar Ranjan Mohanty
Research
Associate, Institute for Conflict Management
February
20, 2012
At least 40
Shias were reportedly killed, and another 24 injured, on February 17, 2012,
after a suicide bomber detonated his explosives near the Imambargah (Shia place
of worship) in the Kurmi bazaar of Parachinar, the main town of the Kurram
Agency in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), at around 1:45 pm.
The miseries of the locals did not end there. Shortly thereafter, Security
Forces (SFs) fired on crowds protesting the attack, killing three people. The
Fazal Saeed Haqqani-led Tehreek-e-Taliban Islami (TTI) – a breakaway faction of
the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) – has claimed responsibility for the
attack. “We have targeted the Shia community of Parachinar because they were
involved in activities against us,” Fazal Saeed told the media over phone, from
an undisclosed location. He added, further, “We had warned the political
administration previously not to side with Tooris (the local Shia tribe)... We
caught a man yesterday who was planting a bomb at a petrol station owned by a
Sunni. We did it in response.”
The suicide
attack is a severe blow to the Kurram Agency peace deal, which was signed by
rival warring sects on October 9, 2011. The deal — signed by 25 representatives
each of the two sects during a tribal jirga (council) in Parachinar with
Political Agent Shahuddin Shahab as the guarantor – called for the
implementation, in letter and spirit, of an agreement signed by a grand jirga
of Sunni and Shia tribal elders in Murree in October 2008. The Murree agreement
had, since, remained unimplemented. According to the agreement, hundreds of
Sunni families displaced by fighting were to be repatriated to their homes in
Parachinar. The two sides were to constitute a committee to settle other petty
issues. Display of arms in Parachinar city was banned, and a fine of PKR one
million was to be imposed on violators. Nobody was to try to avenge any earlier
murder. The authorities would take action against the violators, who would also
pay a fine of PKR two million to the community. The two communities also
promised to ensure the sanctity of mosques and Imambargahs, and were not to
make derogatory remarks against the respective beliefs of the other. The
agreement also made it binding on both groups to deny shelter to
troublemakers, identify such elements and help the Government in taking action
against them.
Sectarian
violence is nothing new to the Kurram Agency, the only tribal Agency with a
significant Shia population. Strategically located, the Kurram Agency projects
into Afghanistan on three sides, and has always been of critical importance for
Pakistan. It shares the major portion of its borders with the troubled Logar,
Paktia, Khost and Nangarhar Provinces of Afghanistan. The al Qaeda and Taliban
infested Tora Bora Mountain range in the Nangarhar Province of Afghanistan
shares its boundaries with the Kurram Agency. In the north-east, it abuts the
Khyber Agency; the Orakzai Agency lies to the east; the Hangu District of
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) lies south-east; and the North Waziristan Agency lies south.
The Kurram Agency connects the tribal areas of Pakistan to Afghanistan through
lower, central and upper Kurram. Crucially, the Thal-Parachinar route is the
shortest route to Kabul.
Kurram
comprises three sub-divisions: Upper, Central and Lower Kurram. Some 58 per
cent of its population is Sunni, and 42 per cent Shia (according to the 1998
Census). The majority of Shias live in Upper Kurram, while Sunnis dominate
Lower and Central Kurram. The present cycle of escalation started when three
people were killed and 13 were injured in an attack on a Shia Imambargah in the
morning of April 6, 2007. The Thal-Parachinar Road, the only artery linking
Kurram with other parts of the country, has remained closed to normal traffic
since November 2007, when clashes broke out in the area. Nearly five years of
sectarian fighting have left over 2,000 dead and at least 3,500 injured.
Annual Fatalities in
Kurram Agency, 2008-2012
|
Years |
Civilians |
SF Personnel |
Militants |
Total |
|
2008 |
158 |
0 |
49 |
207 |
|
2009 |
37 |
3 |
199 |
239 |
|
2010 |
10 |
0 |
108 |
118 |
|
2011 |
85 |
36 |
457 |
578 |
|
2012* |
45 |
27 |
104 |
176 |
|
Total |
335 |
66 |
917 |
1318 |
Source: SATP, *Data till February 19,
2012
A truce was
declared between Sunni and Shia tribes on February 3, 2011, to end bloodshed
between the two sects. A grand jirga (tribal council) composed of tribal elders
and parliamentarians from the FATA announced a peace accord. Headed by Malik
Waris Khan Afridi, a former Federal Minister from the Khyber Agency, the
225-member tribal jirga had taken two years to arrange a negotiated settlement.
Member of National Assembly (MNA) Sajid Turi from NA-37 (Tribal Area III) and
MNA Munir Khan Orakzai from NA-38 (Tribal Area III) constituencies in Kurram
Agency played leading roles to bring the two sides to the negotiation table.
Federal Minister of the Interior Rehman Malik attended the News Conference
announcing the accord, to demonstrate the Government’s support for this
‘historic’ event.
The truce
did not last long. On March 25, 2011, at least 13 passengers were killed and
eight injured, while another 33 were abducted by suspected Sunni militants in
an attack on a convoy of Shia passenger vehicles in the Kurram Agency. 22
persons were subsequently released, on June 21, after receiving PKR 30 million
as ransom, while 11 remain in the custody of the terrorists. The
Thal-Parachinar route was shut down after the incident. The issue of the forced
closure of the Thal-Parachinar road in the Kurram Agency was raised in the
National Assembly on April 13, 2011. Sajid Turi, the Shia legislator from
Kurram Agency, demanded that the Government take action against the militant
groups responsible for the attacks on this route.
The route
was re-opened with the October 9, 2011, peace agreement. However, the February
17, 2012, suicide attack by TTI indicates a collapse of the agreement in the
Agency.
According
to media reports, TTI’s Saeed Haqqani had reportedly issued a statement soon
after the October 2011 accord, declaring that no peace could be established in
Kurram Agency against his will. Reports also indicate that he had refused to
give any guarantee for the implementation of the accord or to follow the
decisions of the jirga.
Saeed
Haqqani started his militant activities with the support of a 300 to 400 strong
armed militia in 2005. In 2007, he joined the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).
Reinforced by Hakeemullah Mehsud’s cadres, his group took active part in the
sectarian violence of 2007 and in the closure of the Thal-Parachinar road. He
has been involved in abduction of more than 40 Turi (Toori) Bangash tribesmen.
At least a dozen of those kidnapped were killed. Saeed Haqqani is also closely
linked with the Jalaluddin Haqqani faction of the Afghan Taliban, strongly
supported by Pakistan’s Army and Inter Services Intelligence (ISI). Media
reports suggest that Saeed Haqqani remains in the ‘good books’ of the Pakistani
authorities, and has not attracted the state’s ire during military operations
in the region.
Significantly,
when Operation Koh-e-Sufaid (White Mountain) was initiated in June 2011,
against TTP, Saeed Haqqani, at that time a TTP ‘commander and chief of its
Kurram chapter, disassociated himself from the group and raised the banner of
TTI. Hours after reports of the split emerged, unidentified assailants in a car
opened fire at Shakirullah Shakir, a senior ‘commander’ and ‘spokesman’ for the
Fidayeen-e-Islam faction of the TTP. It is believed that Fazal Haqqani’s defection
was a calculated move by the Government and SFs to engineer a split in the TTP
before the start of Operation Koh-e-Sufaid. Saeed Haqqani’s group remained safe
through the military operations, virtually conferring on it the status of the
sole power player in the area.
Fazal
Saeed’s rise appears to have been consecrated by the Pakistan Army as part of
its enduring strategy to use Islamist terrorist factions as instruments of
domestic political management. This is a strategy that has drawn Pakistan into increasing
chaos, and its people into great suffering. With its latest atrocity in
Parachinar, the TTI has demonstrated that the Kurram Agency has little hope for
peace as long as this perverse dynamic continues to be sustained by the powers
in Islamabad.
Source: South Asia Intelligence Review
URL: https://newageislam.com/the-war-within-islam/sunni-shia-war-pakistan-kurram/d/6680