Indigenising extremism
In discussions on the ongoing war against militant groups in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, representatives of nationalist, progressive and democratic political parties as well as representatives of civil society have been focusing on a new threat: the so-called 'Punjabi Taliban', an entity unheard of until 2007, but now commonly used to describe a variety of Punjab-based militant groups. As Dr Said Alam Mehsud, a leading anti-militancy campaigner in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, said recently, 'Any progress against militancy that we make in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa will be wasted if militants gain strength in Punjab and the government there does not take action.'
This concern was raised weeks before the shocking attack by two suicide bombers on 1 July at the Lahore shrine of Hazrat Ali Hajveri, popularly known as Data Ganj Bakhsh, one of the earliest saints to introduce Sufism and its spirit of egalitarianism in Punjab. The attack, which has been seen as the handiwork of the Punjabi Taliban, left more than 40 devotees and visitors dead and more than a hundred injured. Even as Pakistan lives with the trauma and aftershocks of this ghastly attack, the country's main opposition leader, Nawaz Sharif, has proposed negotiations with extremist groups, a move many see as a sign of 'weakness'. Sharif´s proposal, however, has been warmly received by the groups themselves.