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India-Pakistan
Khan Lala opposes talks with Taliban
2011-04-29
[Dawn] Veteran politician and central leader of Awami National Party Mohammad Afzal Khan Lala has opposed holding negotiations with Taliban, saying the exercise has already been practiced several times but bore no fruits.

Terrorists deserved no sympathy and needed to be dealt strictly, he said while addressing Guest Hour programme of Beautiful Downtown Peshawar Press Club here on Wednesday.

"These human rightist activists, who are talking about extrajudicial killings in Swat, should recall the agonies of people who have seen slit throats of their near and dear ones in streets and their women lashed by Taliban in the district," he said.

Khan Lala said that he opposed government's agreement with gunnies in Swat
...a valley and an administrative district in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province of Pakistain, located 99 mi from Islamabad. It is inhabited mostly by Pashto speakers. The place has gone steadily downhill since the days when Babe Ruth was the Sultan of Swat...
as he knew well about the future of the deal.

Within few months gunnies went back on their promises and again challenged the state's writ, he added.

He said that the idea to establish Islamic university at Swat was also wrong as it was not a demand of people of the area. "I had asked the governor to establish a university, but not the Islamic university otherwise government would have to rename all the universities as Islamic universities in different districts," he said.

The nationalist leader also urged Afghanistan, Pakistain and India to devise a joint strategy for restoration of sustainable peace in the region.

He said that none of the country could save itself from the menace of terrorism unless they all extended support to each other and avoid playing the 'losing game'.

Expressing concern over increasing incidents of terrorism in the region, he urged the three neighbouring countries to stop leg-pulling and join hands against the menace of terrorism.

"If European nations can unite, why India, Pakistain and Afghanistan can't form a greater alliance at least to fight a common enemy," he asked. He said that those three countries could easily come closer on the basis of common culture, civilisation and customs.

Khan Lala said that entire Pakistain was facing the menace of militancy but Pakhtuns were the worst affected citizens of the country. Pakhtuns could not take a unified stand for solution to their problems as they were divided into four different areas, he added.

To a query, he said that Taliban had basically emerged in Kala Daka, now Torghar district, but they gradually expanded their influence to Swat to exploit the religious sentiments of people, who extended them full support and enabled them to challenge the government's writ.
Posted by:Fred

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