Posted on 12/09/2017 12:44:32 PM PST by SunkenCiv
Supporters of religious groups rally to express solidarity with protesters, who blocked main highway in capital, in Peshawar, Pakistan. Pakistani police have launched an operation to clear an intersection linking capital Islamabad with the garrison city of Rawalpindi where an Islamist group's supporters have camped out for the last 20 days.
(Excerpt) Read more at photogallery.indiatimes.com ...
A demonstrator detained by a policeman gestures near the Faizabad junction in Islamabad, Pakistan. (Reuters)
51 percent cracking down on 49%, let's watch...
Bajwa said that he recently learned that 2.5 million students were being taught in madrassas belonging to the Deobandi school of thought alone. I am not against madrassas, but we have lost the essence of madrassas, he said. So what will they [the students] become? Will they become maulvis [the cleric who lead the prayers] or will they become terrorists?
The country needs to revisit the concept of religious schools and think about giving students in these religious centres of learning a worldly education, Bajwa said.
Pakistan has more than 20,000 registered madrassas, Reuters reported. Security services in the country keep such learning centres under a close watch as they are often a conduit for Islamist militant outfits to recruit youngsters.
In 2016, the military put before the government a detailed plan to deradicalise orthodox religious figures by bringing them into the political mainstream, The Nation reported. This strategy received a setback when the Capital city of Islamabad was put in a gridlock for almost three weeks by a blockade staged by a religious party from the Sunni-Barelvi school of Islamic thought.
The Pakistani army has said this a number of years now, ( http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1155685/posts ) when will they deliver?
I regard Pakistan as a pseudostate; like its neighbors Iran, Iraq, and Afghanistan, it would make more sense to partiition it into different countries along mostly ethnic lines. Balochistan would consist of most of the coastlines of both Iran and Pakistan, and reach inland to the southern pale of Afghanistan, for example. Kurdistan would take bits of what is currently Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.