In Pakistan�s
Swabi district, a bumpy road leads to Shah Mansoor, a small village surrounded
by farmland. Just outside the village, uniform size tents are set up in
hundreds of rows. The sun bores down on the Shah Mansoor camp which has become
a temporary home to thousands of displaced Pakistanis from the Swat area. In
the stifling heat, the camp�s residents sit idly, day after day, uncertain
about their future. They spoke with heated certainty, though, about their
grievances.
As soon as we stepped out of the car, men and children
approached us. They had all arrived from Mingora, the main city of Swat, 15 days prior. One
young man, a student, told us that bombing and shelling had increased in their
area, but, due to a government imposed curfew, they weren�t allowed to leave
their homes. Suddenly, the Pakistani Army warned them to leave within four
hours or they would be killed. With the curfew lifted long enough for them to
get out of Mingora, they joined a mass exodus of people and walked for three
days before reaching this camp.
After being assigned to a section of the camp coordinated by
the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), they were provided
with tents and plastic mats. So far, 554 tents are set up in this section, with
an average of 6 t010 people living in each tent.
Inside the tents we visited, families had few belongings.
Some more fortunate families have a few cooking supplies and utensils. But for
the most part, they now own little more than the clothing they wore when they
fled from their homes. The neatness of the camp disguises the chaos that has
afflicted its inhabitants.
A man who owned a small shop in Mingora described the
carnage and chaos they had left behind. �There were not hundreds but thousands
of dead bodies on the streets,� he said. �We had only enough time to dig a mass
grave and cover some of the bodies with mud.� Since the media have been banned
from entering Mingora, it�s impossible to establish facts about the numbers of
civilians who were killed. But the men gathered around us nodded in agreement
as the shopkeeper spoke. �They were killing us in that way there, now in this
way here,� he said, pointing to the tents. �Aren�t we part of this country?�
�For the past two years,� the shopkeeper continued, �the
government hasn�t killed the Taliban. They only kill our women and children.�
�The UNHCR has been helpful,� said another man, a farmer,
�but so far no government official has come to ask how we are. Isn�t this our
government?�
Along with disappointment in their government, they harbor
resentment toward the wealthy people of Swat. The men we were talking to did
not have jobs that would earn high incomes. One man was a fruit and vegetable
vendor. Another drove a donkey cart. Several others were farmers. Many nodded
as the shopkeeper decried the rich people who, he said, are now in Islamabad, living in air
conditioned places, just as they did in Swat. �These people got rich at the
expense of the poor people,� claimed one of the farmers.
The circle opened up and an elderly man joined us. The
shopkeeper explained that the elderly man�s five-room house was leveled by
shelling. His three sons and five daughters are nowhere to be found. The older
man stood with us, silent and trembling.
The shopkeeper told more details about difficulties they
faced living in the tents. They sleep on the ground with no padding. They have
no water for bathing. Four latrines were set up, but none of them have doors
and they aren�t yet ready for use. The UNHCR officials have said they could
provide electricity for this section of the camp. All they need is government
permission, but it hasn�t yet been granted. A few days ago, the government sent
a water truck, but the water was for sale.
The UNHCR recorded each person�s name when they distributed
the tents. This is as close as these refugees have come to being officially
registered. �The government announces that registration has happened,� said one
man, speaking in English, �but it only happens on the air.�
The men we talked with said they were poor in Mingora, but
at least they had beds to sleep on. They could cook their own food, earn a
living and provide the basic needs for their families.
The men believe the government should open up the roadblocks
and let them go home. They are frustrated because fighting with the Taliban has
gone on for two years. �The Taliban aren�t killed,� said one man, �just our
women and children.�
The women rarely leave the tents which become insufferably
hot in the afternoon. Listless little children were lying on the ground in one
tent. Where the children come from, it is much cooler. Their mother said the
children can�t adjust to the heat and always feel sick.
We asked the men if they could see any purpose for all of
this suffering and violence. They said they think the purpose is to take their
land and give it to someone else. When we asked to whom they thought their land
would be given, they listed four countries: Afghanistan,
India, China or America.
Perhaps they weren�t aware that U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke had
visited another section of the camp six days ago. Richard Holbrooke assured
that the international community would �try its best for provision of maximum
facilities to the displaced persons of Swat, Buner and other affected areas.�
(AP Pakistan, June 4, 2009)
But Richard Holbrooke�s plans have already been violently
derailed in nearby Peshawar where he visited the premises of the luxury
five-star Pearl Continental Hotel last week. The AP reports that, according to
two senior US officials in Washington, the State Department had been in negotiations
with the hotel�s owners �to either purchase the facility or sign a long term
lease to house a new American consulate in Peshawar.� (AP, June 10) On June 9, a massive
truck bomb destroyed the hotel, killing 11 people and wounding 60.
As we ended our conversation, the shopkeeper pointed at
three military helicopters flying overhead. �These are the same as those that
shelled us,� he said. He handed the sick child he carried in his arms over to
the child�s grandfather and pointed to the mountain nearest the camp. �We�ve
seen these helicopters fire at this mountain. The explosives splinter the
mountainside. The children are afraid that the helicopters will hit them
again.�
It�s difficult to see what can point to a new and better
life for the people affected by this latest round of violence and war in
Pakistan. A ban sign superimposed on a rifle is posted on a billboard at the
entrance to the camp, announcing that weapons are prohibited. A true ban on
weapon proliferation, agreed to by all parties involved, coupled with
determination to equitably share resources with impoverished people in Pakistan would be one way to promise a better
future for Pakistan�s
children. For now, the little ones languishing in the camp are, quite
literally, down and out in Shah Mansoor.
Kathy Kelly (kathy@vcnv.org) and Dan Pearson (dan@vcnv.org) are co-coordinators of Voices for
Creative Nonviolence. With Gene
Stoltzfus and Razia Ahmad, they have been traveling in Pakistan.