By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 23rd July 15
You thought Pakistani support for terrorism
was buoyed by that country’s poverty, with poor, unemployed youths joining
terrorist groups? Wrong! Pakistan’s poor people oppose terrorism far more
forcefully than the country’s growing middle class.
And you thought promoting democracy in
Pakistan was the way to snuff out terrorism since terrorism is the antithesis
of democracy? Wrong! When it comes to Kashmir, democrats see the insurgency as
a struggle for “azadi” or freedom, warranting armed struggle, even jihad.
Were you under the impression Pakistani
jihadi groups were recruiting mainly from madrassahs (religious seminaries) that
churn out radicalised youth? Wrong again! Most jihadis are reasonably educated,
while less than one per cent of Pakistani youth get their education exclusively
from a madrassah.
These were some of the common perceptions of
Pakistan that C Christine Fair, an acclaimed Pakistan expert who teaches at
Georgetown University rebutted on Thursday in Delhi. Fair was speaking at a
think tank, Observer Research Foundation, on: “Violence in Pakistan: who
supports it? Rebutting conventional wisdom”.
Fair is the darling of Pakistan-critics worldwide,
after an acclaimed book this year --- entitled “Fighting to the end: the
Pakistan Army’s way of war” --- which quoted extensively from the writing of
Pakistani officers to argue they placed the army’s interests far above those of
Pakistan.
Deploying meticulous quantitative research
to support unconventional conclusions, Fair argued that the Lashkar-e-Toiba’s
(LeT’s) rank and file consists of reasonably well-educated youth, 60 per cent
of whom had passed their matriculation and even intermediate examinations.
This conclusion is based on a study of
1,000 LeT fighters who were killed, mostly fighting in Kashmir. Research
associates visited the homes of each of the dead jihadis to record their
qualifications and motivations (see chart).
Lashkar-e-Toiba educational profile, versus Pakistani males
Education Level
|
Lashkar-e-Toiba
|
Pakistan
|
Punjab
|
Illiterate
|
1.3 %
|
30.4 %
|
30.8 %
|
Primary
|
12.7 %
|
21.4 %
|
21.6 %
|
Middle
|
21.7 %
|
14.3 %
|
15.6 %
|
Matric
|
44.0 %
|
13.1 %
|
13.4 %
|
Intermediate
|
16.8 %
|
10.9 %
|
9.3 %
|
“More than 60 per cent of them were
matriculates or above, while only about 23 per cent of Pakistani, and Punjabi,
males above the age of ten have similar qualifications. And just 1.13% of the
Laskhar fighters were illiterate, compared to more than 30 per cent of the
broader population”, said Fair.
The reason for that, she explained, is that
the LeT recruits like most regular armies, turning away the uneducated and the
unintelligent. “Even after they’re recruited, these Lashkar guys have to
constantly prove themselves. They have to constantly lobby to be picked up for
the next round of training. So Pakistan’s better lot are being killed [by Indian
security forces] while fighting in Kashmir”, says Fair.
Fair says the Pakistan Army and the LeT
recruit most of their fighters from the same few districts in Punjab. The army
gets the pick of the youth, while the Lashkar chooses from those remaining.
She also rebutted Pakistan’s frequent
complaint that supporting the US war on terror after the 9/11 attacks in 2001
had unleashed the monster of terrorism upon the country. Fair proves that
terror-related violence was entrenched before 2001.
Differentiating between terror-related
violence and political violence (see chart), Fair points out that
terror-related incidents rose somewhat from 2,087 in the 14-year period from
1988-2001; to 3,721 in the decade between 2002-2011. In these same periods, incidents
of political violence rose from 11,340 to 12,820.
Terrorism vis-à-vis political violence
Year
|
Terrorist attack incidents
|
Killed in terror incidents
|
Wounded in terror incidents
|
Other political violence incidents
|
Killed in political violence incidents
|
Wounded in political violence incidents
|
1988-2001
|
2,087
|
2,086
|
6,754
|
11,340
|
10,873
|
12,886
|
2002-2011
|
3,721
|
3,697
|
9,025
|
12,820
|
24,966
|
20,924
|
1998-2011
|
5,808
|
5,783
|
15,779
|
24,160
|
35,839
|
33,810
|
“But if you talk to Pakistanis, they would
like you to believe that everything was fine before 9/11”, she says.
Her conclusions are based on a rich
database on terrorist-related and political violence in Pakistan, painstakingly
compiled by Fair and her associates during a 24-year period from January 1,
1988 through May 2011. These were first published online last year in a paper
entitled “Measuring political violence in Pakistan: Insights from the BFSR
Dataset”, co-authored by Fair.
Fair explains why Pakistan’s poor,
particularly urban poor, do not support terrorism. She points out that most
terrorists are from the Deobandi sect, which is responsible for practically all
terror-related violence in Pakistan, including sectarian violence against
Shias, Barelvis or Ahmedis, or anti-minority violence directed at Christians
and Hindus.
“These target groups, and their shrines
that are often hit, are located in the poorest parts of the towns and cities.
These people are actually the immediate victims of terror. They are potential
allies [for counter-terrorism officials]”, she says.
Fair’s extensive research on madrassahs
suggests they are not the factories of jihad. What they do engender is a
mind-set that supports jihad.
“Kids don’t make the decision to join a
madrassah; their parents do. And parents who put their kid into a madrassah are
more likely to approve of youngsters taking up jihad. While a madrassah
education seldom leads to a youngster taking up jihad, there is a correlation
between the two.
I like this paragraph:
ReplyDelete"Deploying meticulous quantitative research to support unconventional conclusions, Fair argued that the Lashkar-e-Toiba’s (LeT’s) rank and file consists of reasonably well-educated youth, 60 per cent of whom had passed their matriculation and even intermediate examinations."
I really am interested in this meticulous research, how she managed to track each and everyone of the LeT boys killed in Kashmir and even more incredulous their education level ;-). It is this incredulous research and "quantitative" analysis that leads to the unconventional conclusion or is it the otherway around; that the unconventional conclusions lead to meticulous quantitative research ;-). This may explain why she is only ever invited to speak in India. The more she write the more more she sounds like a woman spurned.
By the way you should tell her that she needs to update her knowledge on PA recruitment patterns. Her sources are from books in the 1960's, lol.