Peshawar's parents are seeking
retribution: not only from the Taliban gunmen who slaughtered their children one
year ago, but from a state they say has not yet answered for the nightmare they
are still living.
The massacre saw nine extremists scale the walls of an army-run school in the
northwestern Pakistani city, lobbing grenades and opening fire on terrified
children and teachers, murdering them one by one before being killed by security
services.
Many of the mothers and fathers of more than 130 children murdered in the
December 16 attack are ethnic Pashtun, their lives infused with the tribal code
of ethics of which badal -- or revenge -- is a cornerstone.
As such they take grim satisfaction in knowing that the military has wreaked its
vengeance on the insurgents with hangings, arrests, and an offensive in the
tribal areas where militants had previously operated with impunity.
But the same parents are railing against a deafening silence from authorities
over how a security apparatus put in place to protect them could have failed
their children so completely.
"At least someone at some level was responsible... Why don't they talk about
it?" asks Abid Raza Bangash, whose 15-year-old son Rafiq was among those
slaughtered.
The assault -- in which 134 children and 15 adults died -- shocked and outraged
Pakistanis, already scarred by nearly a decade of attacks, and prompted a
crackdown on extremism in civil society.
But no government, security or military official has yet been held to public
account.
Bangash left his job as an engineer to become head of the Shuhada (Martyrs)
Forum, a lobbying group of parents of the victims who gather on the 16th of
every month in the city's cultural centre, Nishtar Hall.
"We want a fact-finding inquiry commission headed by a senior judge to probe
this incident. The findings of that commission should be made public," he told
AFP.
"Still my heart is crying," he says, remembering his bright son. "How can I
forget him?"
- 'We wanted to see them hanged' -
In August, after a military trial that took place behind closed doors, the army
announced that six militants linked to the Peshawar assault would be executed,
while a seventh was given a life sentence.
On December 2, four were hanged at dawn in a prison in the northwestern city of
Kohat, enraging parents who wanted to witness their deaths.
"All the nation wanted to see these animals hanged publicly so others would not
dare follow their example," Bangash told AFP angrily after the executions.
"Being a Pashtun, I think public hanging would be a remedy for the parents -- a
sort of relief to them," said Ajun Khan, whose only son Asfand, a 10th grader,
was among the children killed.
But Khan said even public executions would not deter the parents from their
quest for a judicial inquiry.
They will seek remedy with the United Nations or the International Court of
Justice if their demands are not met, he said.
The parents have already met with officials at all levels and powerful military
chief General Raheel Sharif three times, but Bangash says they have not been
given the answers they seek, or reassurances that other people's children will
be kept safe in the future.
- Elemental loss -
Not all the parents agree. Tufail Khattak, father of victim Shersha, 15, lauded
both the civil and military authorities for their efforts.
"We have been acknowledged," he said, noting that the victims have already been
honoured with awards and families been paid compensation, while more than 100
government schools have been named after the children.
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's information minister Mushtaq Ghani said he understands the
parents' feelings, but dismissed the need for a judicial inquiry, saying the
facts of the assault were clear.
On Friday he told reporters that the investigation into the attack had been
expanded, and that parents would soon be told of the findings.
A senior security official also defended steps taken since the attack to AFP,
saying the army would go to "any extent" to satisfy the parents "provided their
demands are fair".
Some have argued that if the government and army would reveal what went wrong,
it might make still-traumatised survivors less afraid.
But for others nothing -- not badal, security or a judicial inquiry -- will ever
be enough.
Andalib Aftab, a chemistry teacher at the school who lost many of her students
as well as her 16-year-old son Huzaifa in the attack, described the parents as
fish without water.
"We just want to see our kids," she said tearfully.
(Special Thanks to Mr.Tarakzai for this Article)