Policing Urban Violence in Pakistan

Publication language
English
Pages
55pp
Date published
23 Jan 2013
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Conflict, violence & peace, Urban
Countries
Pakistan

Endemic violence in Pakistan’s urban centres signifies the challenges confronting
the federal and provincial governments in restoring law and order and consolidating
the state’s writ. The starkest example is Karachi, which experienced its deadliest year
on record in 2013, with 2,700 casualties, mostly in targeted attacks, and possibly 40
per cent of businesses fleeing the city to avoid growing extortion rackets. However,
all provincial capitals as well as the national capital suffer from similar problems and
threats. A national rethink of overly militarised policy against crime and militancy is
required. Islamabad and the four provincial governments need to develop a coherent
policy framework, rooted in providing good governance and strengthening civilian
law enforcement, to tackle criminality and the jihadi threat. Until then, criminal gangs
and jihadi networks will continue to wreak havoc in the country’s big cities and put
its stability and still fragile democratic transition at risk.
Some of the worst assaults on religious and sectarian minorities in 2013 occurred
in Quetta and Peshawar, including the 10 January suicide and car bomb attack that
killed over 100, mostly Shias, in Quetta; the 16 February terror attack that killed
more than 80, again mostly Shias, in Quetta’s Hazara town; and the 22 September
bombing of a Peshawar church that killed more than 80 people, mostly Christians.
The provincial capitals of Peshawar, Quetta, Karachi and Lahore are bases of operations
and financing for a range of extremist groups and criminal gangs that exploit
poor governance and failing public infrastructure to establish recruitment and patronage
networks. As urban populations grow, the competition over resources, including
land and water, has become increasingly violent.
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK)’s capital, Peshawar, and Balochistan’s capital, Quetta,
are hostage to broader regional security trends. The conflict in Afghanistan and crossborder
ties between Pakistan and Afghan militants have undermined stability in KPK
and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). Military-dictated counterinsurgency
policies, swinging between indiscriminate force and appeasement deals
with tribal militants have failed to restore the peace, and instead further empowered
violent extremists. Police in Peshawar, which has borne the brunt of militant violence
and where violence is at an all-time high, lack political support and resources and
appear increasingly incapable of meeting the challenge. Indeed, while militants and
criminals frequently target that city, the force is powerless to act when they then
seek haven in bordering FATA agencies, because its jurisdiction, according to the
Frontier Crimes Regulation (FCR) 1901, does not extend to these areas.