کور / #PTM / Pashteen: PTM Hurt Pakistan Military’s Terror-Sponsoring Industry

Pashteen: PTM Hurt Pakistan Military’s Terror-Sponsoring Industry

Hasib Danish Alikozai VOA

In response to last week’s accusation by the military that Pakistan’s Pashtun Tahafuz Movement (PTM) has been receiving funds from Afghanistan’s and India’s intelligence agencies, its leader, Manzoor Pashteen, blamed the country’s most powerful institution of turning the war on terror into a lucrative business in their region.

Pashteen alleged to VOA in a telephone interview from Islamabad that Pakistan’s military has been trying to sow confusion among people about PTM.

“These are baseless accusations that we receive funding from foreign intelligence agencies. They cannot produce a single evidence,” Pashteen said. “There is an English saying that if you cannot convince them, confuse them. That’s exactly what the military has been doing against us.

“They [military] train militants here and then the militants carry out attacks in my country and other countries of the world. With PTM’s emergence as a movement, the military can no longer operate with impunity to do that and their so-called business has been faced with difficulties,” he added.

Military’s warning

Last Monday, Major General Asif Ghafoor, director general of Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) and the spokesperson for the military, accused the PTM of receiving funds from Afghanistan’s National Directorate of Security (NDS) and India’s Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), and advancing their agendas inside Pakistan.

FILE – Major General Asif Ghafoor, director general of Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), speaks during a news conference in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, April 17, 2017.
FILE – Major General Asif Ghafoor, director general of Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), speaks during a news conference in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, April 17, 2017.
“On the PTM website, they have got a number that states the amount of funds they have collected from Pashtuns around the world. But tell us how much money did you get from the NDS [Afghanistan’s National Directorate of Security] to run your campaign? How much money did RAW [India’s Research and Analysis Wing] give you for the first dharna [sit-in protest] in Islamabad?” Ghafoor asked.

“We want to do everything for the people [of tribal areas], but those who are playing in the hands of people, their time is up. Their time is up,” Ghafoor added, implying that PTM members are serving as foreign agents.

But Pashteen charges that it’s the military that gets funding from foreign countries, not his movement.

“They [military] want to end PTM so that they could continue nurturing militancy and then attack them here and there and receive funding for it from the international community,” Pashteen said.

“It was not us. It was them who have received about $33 billion from foreigners,” he added.

‘Anti-state forces’

Ghafoor urged Pakistan’s Pasthun population not to be provoked by what he called “anti-state forces,” which he used to describe Pashteen and his movement.

“Pakistan armed forces will not rest until your issues are resolved. We hope that you will not pay attention to their [PTM] rhetoric and instead stop these anti-state forces,” Ghafoor said.

But Pashteen maintains that he respects the country’s constitution and that the military has a tendency to label anyone who fights for constitutional rights as “anti-state forces.”

“Whomever criticizes them [military] is anti-state. Those who demand respect to constitution are labeled as anti-state. Those who demand a republic are called traitors and anti-state,” Pashteen said.

“You tell me, isn’t it constitutional to demand due process for missing persons? We simply say that if someone committed a crime, punish him, and if someone is innocent, release him. How is that unconstitutional?” he asked.

Grievances

Pashtuns, who are the largest ethnic group in Afghanistan but a minority in Pakistan, have felt neglected and targeted in Pakistan for some time. That long-simmering anger boiled over in January 2018 with the death of Naqeebullah Mehsud, a 27-year-old shopkeeper-turned-model, at police hands in Karachi.

FILE – A member of the Pashtun community holds a picture of Naqibullah Mehsud, whose extrajudicial killing by Karachi police sparked nationwide protests, in Islamabad, Pakistan, Feb. 1, 2018.
FILE – A member of the Pashtun community holds a picture of Naqibullah Mehsud, whose extrajudicial killing by Karachi police sparked nationwide protests, in Islamabad, Pakistan, Feb. 1, 2018.
Police said at the time that Mehsud had been killed in a shootout with members of the Pakistani Taliban, but an internal inquiry cast doubt on that claim, saying Mehsud had no evident link to any militant group.

The killing sparked days of protests and a weekslong march in Pashtun-dominated northwestern Pakistan. It also prompted the establishment of the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement, or Pashtun Protection Movement, that has since held dozens of rallies across the country demanding basic rights for ethnic Pashtuns.

The movement demands an end to extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, removal of military checkpoints, and the establishment of a truth and reconciliation commission.

The government says that measures have been taken to address those concerns.

Pashteen, however, denies they have and vows his movement will continue to hold rallies and push the government for meeting those demands.

Media blackout

Pashteen has increasingly relied on social media to get his movement’s message across to supporters, complaining that local Pakistani media have not covered the group’s activities.

He claims after he held an interview with Khyber TV a month ago, “When they wanted to air it, soldiers went in to the station and confiscated the very computer that the interview was stored in.”

He said he has been added to the Exit Control List, banning him from travel abroad.

Pashteen said the military has been harassing and intimidating him and his friends to get them to end the movement, but he vowed that the movement would continue to operate until their demands are met.

“The military even warned us in its recent press conference. We have been nonviolent and we would continue to be nonviolent in the future. We believe in humanity and we would serve humanity. We would never harm anyone. But our movement will continue,” Pashteen said.
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