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PAKISTAN: NGOs close down operations
after four die in Mansehra attack
February 28, 2008 (IRIN) - Non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) in Mansehra, about 80km north of Islamabad, have suspended
their work, wary of a potential security threat after an attack
on the office of the UK-based Plan International left four dead.
On 25 February about 12 armed gunmen burst into the office of the
NGO, which has been engaged in relief work in Pakistan for 10 years.
Since the devastating earthquake of October 2005, which killed over
75,000 and rendered millions homeless, Plan International, which
works mainly with children, has undertaken school building projects,
rehabilitation work and other projects aimed at uplifting communities.
The gunmen opened fire on staff, killing four, including three Pakistani
staff members. Another two were badly hurt and remain in hospital.
Hand grenades were then flung inside the offices, triggering a fire
that destroyed records and equipment and left bodies badly charred.
"I am just shocked," Mia Haglund Heelas, the country director
of Plan International said. She had just visited injured staff members
at a Mansehra hospital.
The NGO has closed down offices across Pakistan, with Tom Miller,
International Plan's UK-based chief executive officer, saying in
a brief statement: "Our primary concern is for staff and families
of those hurt in the attack. We have immediately closed our operations
across Pakistan and have dispatched a security team".
But the sense of shock and outrage goes beyond the offices of Plan.
Speaking to IRIN, Dorothy Blane of Concern, an Irish organisation
working in areas that include post-quake relief, said: "It
has affected all work, at least temporarily. But questions about
why this attack happened and who was behind it, whether Plan was
just hit due to bad luck or other factors, are still to be answered.
That will decide what happens now”.
Concern too has shut offices, though Blane remained optimistic.
"International NGOs are supported by Pakistan's Earthquake
Relief and Rehabilitation Authority (ERRA) and they will back us.
We will definitely re-open," she said.
Worsening security
The attack has come amidst a worsening security environment in Mansehra.
For the last two years, threats have been directed against NGOs
and their staff, particularly women. It is assumed local militant
religious leaders are behind such warnings, sometimes backed by
edicts that have been displayed on town walls.
“It is because nothing was done to penalise those behind those
threats that this attack has taken place," I.A. Rehman, director
of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), said. "All
NGOs working for uplift and for women's rights face a threat."
On 26 February Mansehra District Police Officer Mazharul Haq Kakakhail
advised foreign NGO staff to be "careful" and avoid going
to the field without police cover.
The security environment has in the past led to international organisations
cutting back on operations across the North West Frontier Province
and also in parts of Balochistan. The latest incident, it is feared,
will result in greater loss of confidence and could affect the operations
of other groups.
"NGOs here need to be proactive in security arrangements. They
shouldn't assume they are safe because they have been working here
for a long time," Chris Cork, a Pakistan-based NGO management
analyst, told IRIN.
From:http://www.IRINnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77021
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