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'Operation Silence' Against Lal Masjid Islamabad

Posted on July 3, 2007
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Law & Justice, Politics, Religion
359 Comments
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Adil Najam

""UPDATE: Reports in the Pakistan media suggest that the Lal Masjid leader has finally been arrested while trying to escape wearing a burqa. According to a BBC update:

The leader of a radical mosque besieged by Pakistani security forces in Islamabad has been caught trying to escape wearing a woman’s burqa. Security forces seized Abdul Aziz as he tried to leave the Red Mosque amid a crowd of women… He was wearing a burqa that also covered his eyes," a security official told the AFP news agency about the cleric’s escape bid. "Our men spotted his unusual demeanour. The rest of the girls looked like girls, but he was taller and had a pot belly."



ORIGINAL POST: Things are moving fast and the showdown at Lal Masjid, Islamabad that began this morning is now ready to turn into an even more real battle. The day took the lives of at least 10 people, possibly more. These included policemen, soldiers, by-standers, a journalist, and a number of Madrassah students. (For details see our earlier post and update comments on it, here).

""

The latest – and this keeps changing by the minute – is that in a mid-night press conference the government has given an ultimatum to the management of the Lal Masjid (Red Mosque) to surrender. There is no indication that they will. In the past things have always ended with ‘negotiated settlements.’ This time the likelihood of this happening is much less. A curfew has been imposed in the area. Tanks have been called in. So have special forces.


"Your

Metroblog Islamabad is doing a wonderful job of keeping abreast with breaking news. It reports, through Dawn TV, that 111 Brigade (Army) from Rawalpindi has already assembled around the mosque. Ambulances have been fully stocked. Hospitals are on alert. An ultimatum for time has been given (3.30 PST… NOW!). The entire area has been cordoned off.

Here is a news clip from ARYOne, broadcast earlier.

In an article written last week for The News, I had argued that inaction was not a solution and because of so many delays and policies of apeasement some confrontation was now becoming inevitable.

This episode [i.e., the Chinese massage parlor case] will further embolden the already violence-prone brigands at the two madressahs and we are likely to see an escalation in their demands as well as their tactics. Meanwhile, the government has once again demonstrated an inability and/or unwillingness to act decisively. The much-cherished ‘writ of the state’ continues to rot in tatters.

This, it seems, is what happened when earlier the Lal Masjid management incited this escalation in response to the government’s build-up of force around the mosque. In that article, I had gone on to argue that:

Just like standing still in the middle of the road at the sight of the blinding lights of a truck speeding towards it does not save the life of the stunned deer, doing nothing about this escalating crisis out of fear that doing anything will only make things worse is not going to help the government, or Pakistan. Something needs to be done, and done fast.

I had called in the article for the government to "act to judiciously dismantle militancy at Lal Masjid." This situation has to be responded to. But the key word remains "act judiciously." What is really important is how that action is taken. Further bloodshed should be avoided. At least minimized. One hopes that any action is intelligent action and all steps are taken to minimize loss of life. Not just because one does not wish to create needless ‘martyrs.’ Much more so because all life – and everyone’s life – is precious.

The technologies to undertake low casualty offensives are available. The will and sagacity to do so is needed. The test for the government – acting with force in the very center of the Federal Capital – is not only what it does, but how it does it.

Photo credit: Associated Press, B.K. Bangash.

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359 comments posted

Comment Pages: « 45 44 43 [42] 41 40 39 38 37 36 351 » Show All

  1. November 21st, 2007 9:51 am

    Although its sad but right step has been taken.

  2. saba tahir says:
    October 5th, 2007 8:03 am

    mulana was not runing out of the masjid /he was going out for meeting with a leader at his will.the future will show what was right and what is wrong.our nation is advancing towards a deadly detrioration.we have to stop it.the blood ,tears and prayers of innocent mujahids will not go astray.the mujahids which arose just to stop the flood of immodesty

  3. October 4th, 2007 5:42 am

    Please vote for the future of Pakistan,

    http://votepower.blogspot.com

    Be loyal to your country.

    Thanks.

  4. Mansoor Alam says:
    August 23rd, 2007 8:01 am

    There is nothing bad about taking aggressive steps agianst people who are bent on destabilizing the the country.what we don’t like is the idea of doing so under external pressure.

  5. KAWA1 says:
    August 11th, 2007 4:25 pm

    Waheed
    I agree, nobody should be above the law, may it be maulvi’s (using brute force), MQM (massacre of may 12th in Karachi) or the Army (abducting Pakistani citizens without bringing them to trial and selling them at $10,000 a head for GITMO).

    When justice is not equal, this will result.

  6. Waheed says:
    August 4th, 2007 8:19 am

    No terrorist should be spared. Anyone who abducts civilians and kills law enforcement officials deserves to be dealt with stringently. Musharaf has given a clear message that no madrassa wil be allowed to get out of its bound and use force. If he had not done so every madrassa in the country would have followed lal masjid example.

    It

  7. July 23rd, 2007 2:09 am

    This was in Today’s Jang:

    http://kadnan.googlepages.com/lal_quran.gif

    orignal link:
    ——————
    tinyurl.com/2ndx5f

    Now when after reading this if I call secularism a branch of aethism then people like MQ gets irked as they feel that I am calling spade a shovel or getting emotional while I just state facts. Offcourse only muslims would get emotional by reading this rather some other community.

    You guys would also read that seculars got defeated in a secular country(Turkey). Now instead of implementing in Pakistan, seculars should worry about their vatican and try to save secularism there first then worry about Pakistan.

  8. KAWA1 says:
    July 22nd, 2007 1:54 am

    MILITARY QABZA GROUP;

    For our tinpots (Corps Commanders) to make such a big deal out of lal Masjid mullah qabza on the library, it is interesting to read below how the very same mujahids play this game;

    Shoot the messenger

    By Ardeshir Cowasjee

    SURVEYING President General Pervez Musharraf’s chosen chief minister of Sindh, Arbab Rahim, takes one back to the old days of Paul Muni and Scarface, and Sidney Greenstreet and Guttman — those sinister master players on the silver screen. If Arbab does not like a law, he tries to change it, irrespective of whether it is right or not, possible or not possible.

    This applies, inter alia, to the manner in which an upcoming commercial high-rise project on Karachi’s Wall Street, the now diligently dug up and impassible I I Chundrigar Road, is being orchestrated by the largest industrial empire of our country, ‘Milbus’ — to use the word coined by Ayesha Siddiqa to refer to “military capital used for the personal benefit of the military fraternity

Comment Pages: « 45 44 43 [42] 41 40 39 38 37 36 351 » Show All



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