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Old Friday, May 07, 2010
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Default Terrorism and education

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Unemployed terrorists?
May 7,2010



Terrorism is the major concern of Pakistan. The Pakistan government has been waging a war against militants in FATA for five years now. Although the Pakistani forces have destroyed the main network of militant organizations, the deadly suicide attacks of militants on the security forces and soft civilian targets continue, some think, lately with a renewed vigour. The violent strikes in Khyber-Pakhtoonkhwah and Balochistan are rising by the day. It was claimed by the Pakistani forces that the militants are brainwashed into doing such acts because they are basically illiterate. But the arrest of five Pakistani-Americans in Punjab and the recent apprehension of Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad are clear proofs that many educated youth are now part of the terror network.
Sadly, the government of Pakistan has never tried to ascertain what are the reasons behind the educated young people being driven towards terrorist networks. The main cause of our educated young men joining the terror networks is the frustration related to government policies, inflation, injustice or existing favoritism in employment opportunities. Khyber-Pakhtoonkhwah and Balochistan are already choke full of this kind of frustration. The educated class of Punjab is being catered to so they are content with the system. In Sindh, the nationalists are in a mode of rebellion. Because of the corruption in Sindh Public Service Commission (SPSC), jobs are offered only for a buck so frustration of the educated young in Sindh is at its height. -INAYATULLAH RUSTAMANI, Dadu, May 6.
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Old Friday, May 07, 2010
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i agree with you completely, youth of Pakistan is being destroyed by it so called system, there is no merit in our economy, every job has been given on favoritism and they usually ask for bribe especially in sindh, in this we have been victimize bitterly and this bitterness are the root cause of all evils , unemployment have reached on its extreme which is causing so many stumbling blocks. Never know what would be the solution but we must need to be united to bring revolution, otherwise we would be demolished.
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Old Saturday, May 08, 2010
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Originally Posted by inayatrustamani View Post
Daily Nation
Unemployed terrorists?
May 7,2010



Terrorism is the major concern of Pakistan. The Pakistan government has been waging a war against militants in FATA for five years now. Although the Pakistani forces have destroyed the main network of militant organizations, the deadly suicide attacks of militants on the security forces and soft civilian targets continue, some think, lately with a renewed vigour. The violent strikes in Khyber-Pakhtoonkhwah and Balochistan are rising by the day. It was claimed by the Pakistani forces that the militants are brainwashed into doing such acts because they are basically illiterate. But the arrest of five Pakistani-Americans in Punjab and the recent apprehension of Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad are clear proofs that many educated youth are now part of the terror network.
Sadly, the government of Pakistan has never tried to ascertain what are the reasons behind the educated young people being driven towards terrorist networks. The main cause of our educated young men joining the terror networks is the frustration related to government policies, inflation, injustice or existing favoritism in employment opportunities. Khyber-Pakhtoonkhwah and Balochistan are already choke full of this kind of frustration. The educated class of Punjab is being catered to so they are content with the system. In Sindh, the nationalists are in a mode of rebellion. Because of the corruption in Sindh Public Service Commission (SPSC), jobs are offered only for a buck so frustration of the educated young in Sindh is at its height. -INAYATULLAH RUSTAMANI, Dadu, May 6.




Education and Terrorism

It is sometimes thought that Islamic terrorism is fueled by the poverty, lack of education, and lack of opportunities that afflict so many Muslims in the Arab world. Wealthier Muslim nations don't have the same problems, after all, but the truth is that most terrorists are well-educated men with good prospects for their futures.
The Spring 2004 Wilson Quarterly discusses the article “Education, Poverty, and Terrorism: Is There a Causal Connection?” by Alan B. Krueger and Jitka Malecková, in Journal of Economic Perspectives (Fall 2003):

[B]etter-off and better-educated people are more likely to support and participate in terrorist or militant acts than their less fortunate peers. In a December 2001 opinion survey of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, for example, 86 percent of adults who had attended high school supported armed attacks against Israeli targets, compared with 72 percent of their illiterate peers. And outright opposition to such attacks was much higher in the ranks of the illiterate: 26 percent voiced opposition, compared with only 12 percent of better-educated Palestinians.

Many studies of those who actually commit terrorist attacks follow the same general pattern. Of 129 Lebanese Hezbollah militants who became Shahids (martyrs) between 1982 and 1994, only 28 percent came from impoverished families (while 33 percent of all Lebanese were living in poverty). Thirty-three percent of the killers had been to high school, compared with only 23 percent of the general population. A study of 285 Palestinian terrorists who carried out suicide bomb attacks for other groups between 1987 and 2002 found that they were nearly twice as likely to have finished high school and attended college as other Palestinians. Two of the bombers were the sons of millionaires.
It’s not just Palestinians who are like this — Israel’s “Bloc of the Faithful,” one of their most militant groups of Jews, is filled with “teachers, writers, entrepreneurs, engineers,” and other highly educated people. It’s not ignorance that breeds terrorism, but knowledge. The more educated a person is, the more they know about politics, economics, and world issues — and, therefore, the more likely they may become so outraged over injustices around them that they are willing to resort to violence in order to rectify them.

Another important factor is the lack of civil liberties: the more civil liberties a nation has, the less likely people are to engage in terrorism. It’s not hard to understand why this might be so. When a person is able to participate in society openly and to promote their ideas to others, there won’t be as much of a temptation to “participate” by resorting to violence. When they have a chance to make their ideas count through the ballot box, they are less likely to make their ideas count with a gun.

Politics is not far off from violence because even in a democracy, the will of some is imposed on everyone else. Excluding some from participating in what happens in society is a sure way to push them to find other means — and very often, the only “other means” available to them is violence of some sort.
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