ISLAMABAD: Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar on Friday dismissed the idea of negotiating with the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a banned militant network believed to be operating from neighboring Afghanistan, saying Pakistan had the capability to combat the armed faction for an entire century.
Kakar made the statement during his visit to Peshawar, the provincial capital of northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, where he met with senior officials and interacted with the media.
Pakistan has witnessed an uptick in militant violence in its western provinces bordering Afghanistan since the TTP called off a fragile cease-fire with the government last November.
While the network distanced itself from some of the recent suicide attacks targeting religious gatherings in KP and Balochistan, it has frequently assumed responsibility for targeting security forces and civilians in Pakistani cities in the past.
“Don’t you see that their people are being killed on a daily basis,” the prime minister was quoted as saying by the state-owned Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) news agency during a media interaction. “Our people are also being martyred. So, what kind of talks [are you talking about]?”
“They are killing my children and I am killing them,” he continued. “The state of Pakistan is so powerful to fight TTP, not just for one year but rather 100 years.”
The TTP launched hundreds of deadly militant attacks across the country while the US-led international forces were present in Afghanistan.
However, Pakistan launched a string of military operations to target its hideouts in the northwestern tribal region, forcing its fighters to melt away and find refuge in Afghanistan.
Former prime minister Imran Khan’s administration came under criticism in recent years after it decided to negotiate with the TTP and bring its members back in Pakistan if they showed the willingness to put down their arms and accept the country’s legal and constitutional framework.
Khan’s critics said his government’s decision gave the militant network the opportunity to regroup and resort to violent tactics against the Pakistani state once again.
Kakar also praised police and security personnel for laying down their lives while defending the people of KP at the height of militant violence.
“We don’t want to talk to them [the TTP],” he told the media. “Who told you that we have any intention of taking to them?”