Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Suicide bombings and other attacks have killed more than 4,000 people in Pakistan in the past two years.

TO BE NOTED: From Bloomberg:

"Pakistani Militants Razed 100 Girls’ Schools on Border, UN Says

By Michael Heath

April 2 (Bloomberg) -- Militants in Pakistan blew up more than 100 girls’ schools in the tribal region bordering Afghanistan last year as part of a campaign to deny women a role in the country’s future, the United Nations said.

Months of attacks in Pakistan on educational institutions, teachers and students have created a “shocking situation” where parents are refusing to send their daughters to school, said Koichiro Matsuura, director-general of the UN’s Educational, Cultural and Scientific Organization.

The border region has become a base for Taliban and al- Qaeda militants since U.S.-led forces toppled the Taliban regime in neighboring Afghanistan in late 2001. Suicide bombings and other attacks have killed more than 4,000 people in Pakistan in the past two years.

The lawlessness spread to the Swat Valley northwest of the capital, Islamabad, during the past year, where the government signed a peace deal with Taliban militants in February allowing for Islamic law in the former tourist area.

What was once the “Switzerland of Pakistan” has become its Beirut, Pakistan’s envoy to Washington Husain Haqqani said earlier this year, referring to years of strife in Lebanon’s capital.

Taliban militants have attacked 169 girls’ schools in the Swat district since July, state media reported in January. Last week, a suicide attacker bombed a girls’ school in southwestern Baluchistan province.

While the peace accord in Swat “theoretically” allows girls to return to school, Matsuura said “fear still reigns” among parents and many teachers have fled the region in recent weeks.

He said Pakistan’s government must ensure that its commitment to “Education for All” includes guaranteed access to schools for girls, according to a statement on the UN’s Web site yesterday.

“A strong signal must be sent so that everyone can once more benefit from education, which is a determining factor for their future and for the future of the country,” he added."

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