LAHORE, Pakistan: Pakistan will seek the help of a
paramilitary border-security force to crack down on Islamist militants
in Punjab province, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's power base, after
attacks that killed more than 100 people last week, a government
spokesman said on Monday.
On Sunday, days after a suicide bomber killed 13 people in the
Punjabi city of Lahore, the provincial government said the security
force, called the Rangers, would carry out "indiscriminate action"
against all militants and their facilitators.
For the Rangers to conduct a full-scale operation in Punjab
would represent the civilian government once again granting special
powers to the military to fight Islamist militants.
"Rangers-police joint operations will start in a week or
two," the Punjab government's spokesman, Malik Muhammad Ahmad, told
Reuters on Monday.
It was unclear whether the new crackdown would target groups
like the Jaish-e-Mohammad and Lashkar-e-Taiba, which are aligned
against Pakistan's archrival, India. Critics have accused Pakistan in
past crackdowns of sparing militant groups that do not attack on
Pakistani soil. The Pakistani state denies this.
A government statement did not specify which groups would be
targeted. The army's media wing did not respond to requests for comment.
Rangers have been called in for special security operations in much
of the country, but the issue is politically sensitive for Sharif's home
province, where local officials have expressed reluctance.
A crackdown by the Rangers in the port city of Karachi in 2013 drew
accusations of rights abuses and the targeting of opposition
politicians, though the rate of violence has dropped sharply since. The
Rangers deny any wrongdoing.
A member of the Punjab government's task force on law and order said
Rangers' help would be sought in counter-terrorism operations but a
full-scale paramilitary operation like the one in Karachi was "out of
the question." He declined to be named.
The Punjab government has promised "indiscriminate" action against
all militants in the past, including after an Easter Day bombing in
Lahore that killed 70 people.
Last month, after years of pressure, Pakistani police arrested
Lashkar-e-Taiba chief Hafiz Saeed, accused by the U.S. and India of
masterminding the 2008 Mumbai attacks that killed 166 people.
Just days after last week's Lahore bombing, an attack at a
shrine in the southern Sindh province killed 90 people in the country's
deadliest attack in two years, shaking a nascent sense that the worst of
Pakistan's militant violence may be behind it.
The attack was claimed by Middle East-based Islamic State, which has a small but increasingly prominent presence in Pakistan.
(Writing by Mehreen Zahra-Malik, editing by Larry King)
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