The journalists’ minefield
I remember the shock of seeing an AK-47 hanging from the shoulder of Hayatullah, a tribal journalist from North Waziristan. It looked like an ungainly appendage, which had no business being on the shoulder of a journalist. He said by way of explanation, "The government has told us it can't give us any protection against the armed groups, so we have to take care of ourselves." It was August 2005.
Hayatullah's brother, Ihsanullah, was accompanying him, and he too had a gun slung across his back. When Hayatullah drove us to his home from the Mir Ali bus terminal, his brother sat in the back of the rickety pick-up truck, on guard. All through that visit, the fear that he was a marked man was visible in Hayatullah's speech and action. We had hardly sat down for tea when he suggested we leave the house for the school he ran. It was "much safer" there, he said. From what? His answer was vague: "People know we are here." What people? "The people in the neighbourhood, the tribesmen," he said simply. Later that night, he received calls from others, "intelligence people", who wanted to know his whereabouts.