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Surrender or die
Pakistans dictator threatens massacre at Islamabad mosque
By Keith Jones
9 July 2007
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General Pervez Musharraf, Pakistans US-backed military
strongman, said Saturday that the armed Islamic clerics and militants
who control Islamabads Lal Masjid or Red Mosque must surrender
or die.
I want to say to the ones who have been left inside:
they should come out and surrender, and if they dont, I
am saying this here and now: they will be killed.
Musharrafs blunt threat was his first public pronouncement
on the siege Pakistans military is mounting of the Lal Masjida
mosque-school complex situated less than a kilometer from the
national parliament and in close proximity to other key government
buildings, including the headquarters of Pakistans security-intelligence
agency.
The siege began in earnest last Tuesday, when fierce gun-battles
between paramilitaries and Lal Masjid militants left 10 people,
including a reporter and several passers-by, dead, and more than
150 people, many of them young madrassa students, injured.
But the mosque had already been encircled by hundreds of paramilitary
Rangers for days, and the press had long been discussing whether
and when the government would mount a security operation against
the Lal Masjid. In late June, Musharraf charged that heavily-armed
militants with ties to the banned Jaish-i-Muhammad [Army of Muhammad]
and al-Qaeda were ensconced in the mosque complex.
Musharraf, who doubles as Pakistans President and Chief
of Armed Services, offered no proof. But over the past six months,
the Lal Masjids leaders have repeatedly, and with increasing
boldness, flouted the governments authority and fomented
attacks on persons they accuse of violating sharia law.
Pakistani authorities concede that 20 people have died in the
siege to date, including a Ranger and an army colonel. However,
Abdul Rashid Ghazi, the mosques deputy director and current
leader, told GEO television Saturday that there are dozens more
dead within the Lal Masjid complex. Various other media sources
have reported others inside the mosque as alleging that the death
toll is many times greater than the government tally.
Many of those caught up in the siege are young women and boys
who are students at the two madrassas associated with the Lal
Masjid. The Jamia Hafsa seminary for girls is part of the mosque
compound. The Jamia Faridia, a school for boys and young men,
lies several kilometers away. It was taken over by the military,
apparently without incident, early Saturday morning.
An estimated 1,200 students have fled the Lal Masjid compound
since the siege began, but hundreds of people, many of them school
children, are thought to remain. Ghazi claims that close to two
thousand people are still inside the mosque complex. Pakistani
authorities place the number at under 500, but concede many of
these are unarmed, women and children.
Hundreds of peoplemany of them from the poorer, remoter
regions of Pakistan from which the Lal Masjid draws most of its
studentshave gathered near the siege site because they know
or fear that a son, daughter, or other relative is still inside
the besieged mosque complex.
They are terrified the siege will end in the Pakistani military
storming the mosque and a terrible slaughter of innocents.
Such a horrific outcome is a real possibility, given the Pakistani
militarys long record of human rights atrocities and the
governments indifference to the suffering of the Pakistani
people, whether from poverty or from natural disasters like the
cyclone that recently ravaged Baluchistanand given the reactionary
obscurantist politics of the Lal Masjid leaders.
On Wednesday, Pakistani security forces apprehended the head
of the Lal MasjidAbdul Rashid Ghazis brother, Maulana
Abdul Aziztrying to flee the complex clad in a burqa. Aziz,
who previously had made frequent strident speeches in favor of
jihad and martyrdom, subsequently appeared on television and urged
his brother and those remaining in the mosque complex to surrender.
To date, Abdul Rashid Ghazi has rejected such appeals, proclaiming
martyrdom preferable to surrender. Ghazi has called on the government
to grant him and his followers free passage to leave the mosque
complex or to suspend the military operation while placing him
on trial.
Meanwhile, Musharraf, as Saturdays bellicose speech exemplifies,
is taking evident delight in demonstrating his credentials as
a strongman.
Parts of Pakistans capital now resemble an armed camp,
with thousands of Rangers and regular troops mobilized outside
the Lal Masjid. A complete curfew has been imposed on the neighborhood
in which the mosque is situated, with most residents let out only
to buy necessities.
For days there has been intermittent, and sometimes heavy,
gunfire and explosions. Through controlled explosions, the military
has punctured holes in parts of the compounds outer-walls,
with the ostensible aim of helping students to escape the besieged
complex. But the bringing down of the walls would also facilitate
a military strike.
Change of course
The military operation against the Lal Masjid represents a
sharp change of course for the increasingly shaky Musharraf regime.
Pakistans liberal press has frequently contrasted the
authorities failure to assert the states writ in the
face of the open defiance of the Lal Masjids leadership,
with their readiness to use state repression and murderous violence
in trying to stamp out the anti-government protests staged by
opposition parties and civil liberties and workers groups.
On May 12-13, more than 40 persons were killed in Karachi when
goons organized by the MQMa party allied with Musharraf
and the leading element in the Karachi municipal and Sind provincial
governmentsstaged armed attacks to prevent a rally protesting
Musharrafs suspension of the Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court on trumped-up corruption charges.
Till last week the government ignored or temporized with Maulana
Abdul Aziz and Abdul Rashid Ghazi, even as they became increasingly
bold in fomenting and threatening violence against the public
and the state. Over the past six months, the brothers directed
their followers to occupy government buildings arms-in-hand, declared
that they were establishing their own courts to impose sharia
law, and incited the Lal Masjid madrassa students to threaten
and attack persons, such as shopkeepers selling CDs and videos,
partaking in un-Islamic activities. In answer to government
complaints about the actions of the Lal Masjid activists, several
police officers were briefly abducted. The two brothers also repeatedly
threatened to unleash suicide bombers in the event of any action
by security forces against the Lal Masjid.
Claiming to be concerned about the potential loss of lifea
concern that clearly did not apply to its political opponents
in Karachithe government insisted that the only possible
solution to the Lal Masjid agitation was a negotiated one. Towards
that end, several sets of negotiations were held and at one point
in April a deal seemed imminent over the Islamicists complaints
about the demolition of various mosques for urban renewal projects.
Some leaders of the MMAan alliance of six Islamic partiesopenly
supported many of the Lal Masjid activists actions, including
their intimidation campaign in support of sharia law. Although
the MMA is part of the opposition, it is a sometimes
ally of Musharraf and the government. In 2003 it helped pass constitutional
amendments strengthening Musharrafs powers as president
and giving a fig-leaf of legitimacy to his 1999 coup. In Baluchistan,
it is to this day part of a coalition government with the pro-Musharraf
PML (Q).
Government manipulation
Critics of the Musharraf regime have argued that the government
deliberately allowed the Lal Masjid agitation to grow, so as use
the threat of the Islamic right to intimidate the populace into
acquiescing to military rule and to impress the US and British
governments that the current regime is the only alternative to
the Talibanization of Pakistan or, at the very least,
political chaos.
Certainly the Pakistani military and security-intelligence
apparatus have a long history of sponsoring, supporting, and manipulating
the Islamic rightusing it as a bulwark against the working
class and left within Pakistan and as a means of extending Islamabads
geo-political influence in Afghanistan, Kashmir, and India.
The Lal Masjid itself has long been patronized by senior Pakistani
military, government and political leaders and has been part of
the nexus that tied the Pakistani state to the Islamicist right,
both the parliamentary religious parties and various armed groups.
According to BBC News, Maulana Abdullah, the former head of
the mosque and the father of the two brothers who now head itAbdul
Rashid Ghazi and Maulana Abdul Azizwas said to be
very close to General Zia-ul-Haq, Pakistans dictator
from 1977 to 1988. Haq seized power in a military coup, then emerged
as the champion of the Islamization of Pakistan and
the pivot of the US campaign to finance and arm the anti-Soviet
mujahedin in Afghanistan.
Zias son, Ejaz-ul-Haq, is the Religious Affairs minister
in the current Pakistani government
Undoubtedly a factor in Musharrafs decision to mount
a military operation against the Lal Masjid militants was their
recent kidnapping of seven Chinese nationals, whom they accused
of running a brothel. The Chinese government, which is a vital
military and economic partner of Islamabad, strongly protested
the Pakistani governments failure to protect its nationals.
But the timing of the military operation also serves the governments
ends, by distracting attention from the mounting agitation against
Musharrafs attempt to pave the way for his re-election
by sacking the chief justice. (Although Chief Justice Iftikhar
Chaudhry was party to a number of rulings sanctioning Musharrafs
coup, he recently issued several judgments that cut across the
governments agenda, causing Musharraf to deem him unreliable.)
On Monday, the day before violence broke out at the Lal Masjid,
the Supreme Court issued a stunning rebuke of the governmenta
rebuke that suggests the court, which hitherto has been infamous
for its toadying before the military, might well reject its trumped-up
corruption case against Chief Justice Chaudhry.
The Court denounced documents the government had submitted
in support of its case against the Chief Justice, saying they
contained scurrilous accusations against him and other judges.
It also condemned the security establishment for spying on the
judiciary and ordered the Intelligence Bureau to conduct a sweep
of the courts and judges homes for spying devices.
Even more importantly, the confrontation with the Lal Masjid
dovetails with Musharrafs attempt to salvage his regime
by striking a deal with Benazir Bhutto and her Pakistani Peoples
Party. The PPP presents itself as a progressive, even socialist
party, but when in office in the late 1980s and 1990s, it imposed
the dictates of the IMF and is now openly courting the Bush administration.
The PPP, which opposes the feudalist and anti-womens
agenda of the religious right, has said that it would be willing
to enter into a partnership with Musharraf on the purported grounds
of defending secularism against the Islamicists. The Bush administration,
for its part, has signaled that it would favor a deal under which
Bhutto or her nominee became prime minister, while Musharraf remained
president.
Bhutto was conspicuous in her absence from the Multi-Party
Conference held in London this past weekend with the aim of uniting
the opposition parties against the Musharraf regime. While the
PPP did send a delegation, it made clear that its MPs will not
join those of the other parties in resigning their seats in the
national and provincial legislatures so as to deny Musharraf the
quorum he needs to have them (the legislatures form the presidential
college under Pakistans constitution) declare him re-elected
president till 2012. The existing legislatures were chosen in
2002 in elections that the military grossly manipulated.
The Dawn, the most prominent press voice of Pakistani
liberalism, has given its full support to the military operation
against the Lal Masjid and for some time has been urging the coming
together of moderate forces against the Islamic right,
even while conceding that elements like the Lal Masjid are a Frankenstein
monstergiven life by the Haq dictatorship, the Pakistanis
elites anti-Soviet alliance with the Reagan administration
and its constant quest for geo-political advantage against India.
Unquestionably, the Islamicists are enemies of the working
class and democracy. But they cannot be fought on a progressive
basis by aligning with the Bush administration-backed Musharraf
regimea military dictatorship in alliance with imperialismor
through the Pakistani capitalist state.
In the absence of an independent political movement of the
working class that combines the struggle against dictatorship
with the struggle for social equality and advances an internationalist,
anti-imperialist perspective, the Islamic right will continue
to fatten off the genuine grievances of the Pakistani masses over
the crimes of US imperialism in Iraq, Afghanistan and around the
world and over the ever-deepening poverty and economic insecurity
that have resulted from the neo-liberal agenda of the Pakistani
bourgeoisie, the PPP and the Dawn included.
See Also:
Bush administration rushes
to Pakistani dictators aid
[22 June 2007]
Pakistans US-backed dictator
lashes out
Repression fails to staunch anti-Musharraf protests
[8 June 2007]
Following bloodbath in
Karachi
US reaffirms support for Musharraf
[22 May 2007]
Gunbattles in Karachi
Pakistani president seeks to drown mounting opposition in
blood
[14 May 2007]
Pakistan: Will Bhuttos
PPP come to Musharrafs rescue?
[16 April 2007]
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