08-10-2024
Bureau Report
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has banned the Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement (PTM), or Pashtun Protection Movement, a prominent rights group, listing it as a “proscribed organization”.
A notification issued by the federal government on Sunday said the PTM was “engaged in certain activities which are prejudicial to the peace and security of the country”.
Pashtuns are a distinct ethnic group with their own Pashto language, living mostly in Pakistan and Afghanistan but divided by the colonial-drawn Durand Line that splits the two countries.
The movement, founded in 2014, advocates for the rights of ethnic Pashtuns affected by Pakistan’s war against the Taliban and its local affiliate, Pakistan Taliban, known by the acronym TTP.
PTM is known for its strident criticism of Pakistan’s powerful military for its role in alleged enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings of rights activists and ethnic leaders.
PTM, which is not a political party, has at its peak pulled tens of thousands of people to largely peaceful rallies demanding better protection from the state. It said more than 200 activists have been arrested in recent days in advance of a jirga, or a council of elders, planned for later this week.
Pakistani authorities have in recent months attempted to curtail dissent clamping down on the street power of jailed opposition leader and former Prime Minister Imran Khan after he led a wave of criticism against the powerful military and intelligence services.
At the weekend, the capital was on lockdown with entry and exit points blocked and mobile phone services cut as Khan Supporters attempted to protest. The demonstrations came weeks after the government introduced a new protest law that limits gatherings.
The independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) asked for the withdrawal of the ban on the PTM.
“HRCP condemns the government’s decision to proscribe the PTM, a rights-based movement that has never resorted to violence and always used the framework of the Constitution to advocate its cause,” it said in a post.
“This extreme decision was neither transparent nor warranted.”
Pakistan has long grappled with violence in the border areas near Afghanistan, with attacks on the rise since the Taliban seized power in Kabul in 2021.
The country is just days away from hosting several heads of government for a Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) meeting, a bloc established by Russia and China to deepen ties with Central Asian states.
Having risen to prominence as one of the most strident critics of Pakistan’s powerful military, the Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement (PTM) has subsequently faced a sustained campaign of intimidation, censorship and arrests.
The movement, which advocated for the rights of ethnic Pashtuns affected by Pakistan’s war against the Taliban in its northwest, was formed in 2016 by a group of eight university students in the northwestern city of Dera Ismail Khan. All eight hailed from the neighboring district of South Waziristan.
Led by veterinary sciences student Manzoor Pashteen, they formed the Mehsud Tahaffuz Movement (MTM), a pressure group seeking to highlight the struggles of the more half a million people who fled their native South Waziristan due to the fighting.