FATA uplift
The Pakistan
Tehreek-i-Insaaf (PTI) government has revealed its ambitious plans to implement
the merger of erstwhile FATA with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) that was announced
last year and initiate development to help the tribal areas to catch up with
the rest of the country. Towards this end, Prime Minister (PM) Imran Khan has
announced on March 18, 2019 that the government intended to hold a three-week
consultative process with the residents of the tribal areas on the plan to
spend Rs 100 billion per annum for the next 10 years on the development of the
seven tribal agencies that have been redesignated districts. The PM said the
consultative process would be initiated from Bajaur, where he had addressed a
public meeting last week. Explicating the government’s plans further, Special
Assistant to the PM on Media Iftikhar Durrani said development work had already
been initiated in the health, education, infrastructure, communication, law and
order, security and tourism sectors. The consultations, he explained, were
aimed at keeping the locals on board so that development activities in their
areas could be carried out according to their needs and wishes. Meetings would
be held with local jirgas in which KP government representatives would also be
involved. He underlined the PM’s concern about former FATA’s mainstreaming, as
this was a top priority of the PTI government, so much so that he himself
monitored the area’s development programme on a regular basis. Outlining some
of the ongoing projects in the area, Durrani said police were replacing the
Levies, police stations were being built and jobs given to locals in the
police. Courts were also being established. Buildings for schools were being
built and hospitals established in rented buildings. Mobile phone services had
been provided in South Waziristan and would be next provided in Bajaur. It may
be noted that this has only become possible since the area, troubled by
terrorism for many years, was now peaceful after the military’s
counter-insurgency campaigns since 2015. PM Imran Khan, according to Durrani, had
vowed to streamline and improve the Afghan transit trade in the tribal
districts for which necessary work would be completed. During his visit to
Bajaur, the PM had expressed his desire to extend tourist facilities to the
area so that local and foreign tourists could enjoy its beauty. Directives to
this effect had been given to the KP government. Following the merger, the
seven tribal agencies have been given the status of districts with political
and assistant political agents being redesignated as deputy and assistant
commissioners. The jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and Peshawar High Court
(PHC) has already been extended to the tribal areas and the PHC is setting up
district and sessions courts in each of the new districts. This process is expected
to be competed in 2-4 months. The FATA Interim Governance Regulations 2018 will
for the time being continue to operate in place of the old colonial black law,
the Frontier Crimes Regulations (FCR).
While the intent
of the government to bring the new tribal districts in conformity with the system
in the rest of the country and help its development to catch up with the settled
areas is laudable, some ticklish questions remain. First and foremost, given the
parlous state of the country’s finances, where will the resources for spending
Rs 100 billion a year for the next 10 years, i.e. Rs one trillion, come from? Will
the infrastructure development plans be confined to building new roads and
upgrading old ones or is there a proposal to extend the railways network to the
tribal districts? While the idea of streamlining and improving the Afghan
transit trade appears rational, how does the government intend to tackle the
endemic smuggling regime that has taken advantage of a historically porous
border for long? Certainly the tribal districts deserve all the help possible
to overcome the drag of being kept aloof and backward deliberately by the colonial
power and arguably successive governments after Independence too. Whatever were
the strategic compulsions that seemed to suggest this was a good idea at the time,
it is now incumbent on the government to make efforts towards negating this
dark history.
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