Pakistan hosts a major security meeting this week as it struggles
against rising insurgent violence
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[October 14, 2024]
By RIAZAT BUTT
ISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan is hosting a major security meeting this week,
with senior leaders from longtime ally China and archrival India among
those attending.
The Shanghai Cooperation Organization was established in 2001 by China
and Russia to discuss security concerns in Central Asia and the wider
region.
But it’s Pakistan’s own security that is under the microscope.
An attack on a foreign ambassadors’ convoy, violent protests by
supporters of an imprisoned former prime minister, and a bombing outside
Pakistan’s biggest airport are signs the country is struggling to
contain multiplying threats from insurgents.
The meeting, which begins Tuesday in Islamabad, comes at a crucial time
for the government. Here’s why:
Armed groups are outpacing the army
Pakistan says it has foiled attacks through intelligence-based
operations and preventative measures. It frequently vows “to root out
terrorism.”
But the frequency and scale of the recent violence give the impression
that the government isn’t in control and raises questions about its
ability to protect key sites and foreigners, let alone Pakistanis.
In the last few weeks, separatists from Pakistan's southwest Balochistan
province have killed Chinese nationals in Karachi, Pakistan’s biggest
city, as well as more than 20 miners in an attack on housing at a coal
mine, and seven workers in another attack. The outlawed Baloch
Liberation Army, or BLA, is better at mobilizing fighters in different
areas and its operational capabilities have increased.
The group wants independence for the province. It’s not interested in
overthrowing the state to establish a caliphate, which is what the
Pakistani Taliban want. But the two groups have a common enemy -- the
government.
Analysts have said the BLA is getting support from the Pakistani
Taliban. But, even without an alliance, attacks in the southwest are
becoming more audacious and brutal, indicating that the BLA’s tactics
are evolving and taking the security apparatus by surprise.
The Pakistani Taliban continue their shootings and bombings in Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa province, which borders Afghanistan.
It could be difficult for militants to hit the meeting, given the
security around it and the areas where delegates will stay. But they
could still wreak havoc.
Vehicles are often just waved through street checkpoints in Islamabad.
Aside from government buildings and top hotels, body searches and
under-vehicle scanners are rare.
“At stake for the entire state is the only mission -- how to hold such
an event peacefully,” said Imtiaz Gul, the executive director of the
Center for Research and Security Studies. “How to get it done without
any unpleasant incidents taking place. It’s going to be a formidable
challenge for the government to disprove the notion of failures within
the security apparatus.”
Pakistan is paying the price for shutdowns
Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said last week that the national
economy suffered cumulative daily losses of more than $684 million on
account of recent agitation.
He was referring to supporters of former Prime Minister Imran Khan
reaching the heart of the capital, despite a suspension of cellphone
service and placement of shipping containers at access points to the
city. The shutdown hit most business sectors, the gig economy,
point-of-sale transactions, commuters, students, workers and more.
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An army vehicle moves past a welcoming billboard with portraits of
China's Premier Li Qiang, center, Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz
Sharif and President Asif Ali Zardari, displayed along a road
leading to the venue of the upcoming Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO) summit in Islamabad, Pakistan, Sunday, Oct. 13,
2024. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)
Pakistan can’t afford to incur such losses or deepen people’s
grievances. It relies on International Monetary Fund bailouts and
multibillion-dollar deals and loans from friendly countries to meet
its economic needs. There are regular protests over energy bills and
the cost of living.
Despite people's hardships, authorities have declared a three-day
holiday surrounding the meeting.
There have been reports of the government ordering the closure of
wedding halls, restaurants, hotels, cafes and markets in Islamabad
and the neighboring garrison city Rawalpindi for security reasons.
Officials denied the reports, but not very strenuously.
“Generally, high-profile conferences are meant to promote
connectivity, trade and improve a country’s image,” said Gul. But
not in this case because Islamabad won't look like a normal city, he
said.
“It seems they lack innovative thinking," Gul said. "They are unable
to use smart approaches and that’s why the easier way is to shut
everything down.”
A seat at the table and saving face
The last time Pakistan hosted a major conference was in March 2022,
a month before Khan was kicked out of office and a new cycle of
upheaval started.
The country's security situation and political instability are two
factors that have prevented it from holding big international
events.
Even its best-loved sport, cricket, has suffered. There was a
10-year absence of test matches after terrorists ambushed a Sri
Lanka team bus in 2009, killing eight people and injuring players
and officials.
The meeting is Pakistan’s chance to shine, especially in front of
its neighbor China, to whom it is in hock by several billion dollars
and whose nationals are prime targets for armed groups, as well as
India, which is sending its foreign minister to the country for the
first time since 2015.
India and Pakistan have fought three wars and built up their armies
but also developed nuclear weapons. China and India fought a war
over their border in 1962.
Pakistan, unused to hosting such a high-level meeting, will have to
put its best face forward.
Senior defense analyst Abdullah Khan said the government wants to
show its international legitimacy amid the domestic crises.
“The presence of heads of state and other senior officials will
itself be a success as Pakistan will come out of its so-called
isolation,” said Khan. “A peacefully held SCO will further improve
the country’s image.”
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Associated Press writer Munir Ahmed contributed to this report.
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