PAKISTAN: Teacher's murder heightens fear in northwest
Source: IRIN
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PESHAWAR, 14 October 2007 (IRIN) - Saadia Jan, 19, bites her nails uncertainly, as she
perches on the window sill of her parent's house in Peshawar, the capital of Pakistan's North West Frontier Province (NWFP). Till a few days ago, Saadia had her future neatly chalked out
in her mind. "I had decided to become a teacher. In fact, since I was 12-years-old, I knew I wanted to be one," she told IRIN. But, Saadia's plans are now in shreds. "My family
says it is too unsafe to teach and that I should opt for something else," she said. Saadia is engaged to a cousin, from the family's ancestral home in the deeply conservative Khyber
Agency, a tribal area lying west of Peshawar, along Pakistan's border with Afghanistan. "I had hoped to teach at a school there, where my fiancé lives. But now my family fears it may
not be safe," said Saadia. Gunned down The reason for her concerns is the killing of a local teacher, Khatoon Bibi, 40, who was gunned down on 29 September in the Mohmand Agency, lying just
north of the Khyber Agency. According to eye-witness accounts, the teacher, who taught at a girls' community school in the Atokhel area, was shot dead on her way home from school by unidentified
assailants on a motorcycle. Ironically, the incident occurred close to a security checkpoint. Local people were reportedly too afraid even to move her body from the road. Local police later removed
it to Ghalanai, headquarters of the Mohmand Agency. "If such things can happen in broad daylight, out in the open, then what safety is there for us teachers?" asked Uzaira Afridi, 45, who
has taught for 10 years at a Ghalanai girl's school. Around 100 girls' schools across Mohmand Agency closed their doors for a day to show solidarity with the assassinated teacher, and to demand
greater security. Threats "There had been threats to these schools. Teachers were told to wear the 'burqa' [head-to-foot veil] or face death, but the authorities declined to take
these threats seriously," said Uzma Khan, a Peshawar-based teacher-trainer. Schools in other parts of the NWFP have received threats and primary schools that offer classes for both girls and
boys have in some cases been told to segregate classrooms. The incident comes amid a wave of extremism sweeping through the NWFP, according to analysts. Dozens have died in incidents of terrorism,
and 'fatwas' (religious edicts) threatening non-governmental organisations (NGOs) have appeared in several towns. Women activists and teachers are often a key target in such attacks. On 5
October the decapitated head of a still unnamed woman was found in Ghalanai. The head had been wrapped in a shawl, and a note with it, in Pashto - the language most widely spoken across the NWFP -
said the woman had been a prostitute and had been "punished" after a trial by witnesses and jury. While there has been a new wave of threats to female teachers and girls' schools recently, such
incidents are linked to attacks that have taken place over the past few years, say observers. Hacked to death "I gave up teaching at a small primary school near the town of Kohat [about 60km
south of Peshawar] after the murder of two teachers in the neighbouring Orakzai Agency. I am a mother of two small children and the fate of those two women made me too afraid to continue, though I am
a qualified teacher," said Habiba Haroon, 28, now a housewife. The incident she is referring to took place in June 2006. Sayeda Jan and Umme Salma, with Salma's children, Laila, 10, and,
Haider, 4, were spending the hot summer night at the Government Girl's High School in the village of Khwaga Cheri in the Orakzai Agency, located south-west of Peshawar. They had been hired by
the Barani Areas Development Programme (BADP), an ADP project, to offer vocational training to women and girls. In the dead of night, the two women were hacked to death, alongside the children -
apparently by tribesmen determined to deliver a clear-cut message to NGO workers and other teachers. "Terrified" The purpose seems to have been largely served. "Many women are now terrified
of working as teachers. In other cases, their families prevent them from doing so," said Uzma Khan, who said teacher trainers had been "asked by NGOs we work with" to stay away from
areas like Malakand, Dir and Orakzai, because of the "growing risks". At the end of September, the Alliance for Protection of Human Rights (APHR), a group of Peshawar-based civil society
organisations, condemned the "growing violence" in the province and sought protection from the provincial government. But fear is keeping dozens of female teachers out of classrooms in
Mohmand Agency, Malakand and other parts of the NWFP, where a profession once regarded as immensely suitable for women has become one that is now seen to bring with it considerable risks and dangers,
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