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South Asia preview of 2010
The opening year of the millennium’s second decade brings
all of the region’s main countries to a moment of reckoning.
Published: 8:00AM GMT 26 Dec 2009
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/6873696/South-Asia-preview-of-2010.html
The Pakistan People's Party government will come under growing
pressure to expand its offensive against Taliban militants
in South Waziristan Photo: GETTY
Will President Obama’s surge defeat the Taliban insurgency?
Will Pakistan crush its own Islamic rebellion and move on
al-Qaeda’s safe havens in its tribal frontiers? Will India
prove it has finally cast off its Third World image and
become a true global power? Can Sri Lanka win the “peace”
after its military victory against the Tamil Tigers? This
time next year, we may know the answers.
1. In Afghanistan, the frontline in the war on terror, the
year will begin with a blitz as at least 9,000 soldiers
from President Obama’s surge join British troops in a major
January offensive against Taliban strongholds in Helmand.
Their target is opium growing territory west of the Helmand
River, which funds the insurgency and Marjeh city, the production
centre of the roadside Improvised Exlosive Devices which
are killing growing numbers of Nato troops.
January 1 2010 will be the first day of a new civil disobedience
campaign by leaders of the Gorkha movement, who want a separate
Darjeeling hill state within the Indian Union. Their revolt
will paralyse much of West Bengal state and fuel the push
to create new states throughout India following New Delhi’s
support for a Telangana state in Andhra Pradesh. New separatist
movements will emerge to press for the division of Uttar
Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Bihar and Jharkhand.
3. Pakistan, too, will find itself facing its own moment
of truth: its Pakistan People’s Party government, weakened
by the reopening of corruption cases against several of
its leaders, will come under growing pressure to expand
its offensive against Taliban militants in South Waziristan
to those militants it has long regarded as allies in its
regional conflict with India. Washington is intensifying
its campaign to force Islamabad to attack the North Waziristan
forces of Taliban commander Jalaluddin Haqqani, which regular
cross the border to kill Nato troops in Afghanistan. The
government will also face an escalation of America’s “drone
war” against Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar’s ruling
Shura in Balochistan, while anti-Pakistan Taliban militants
are likely to step up their suicide bombing and assassination
campaign on its main cities. Will Islamabad accept there
are no “good” Taliban?
4. The deciding factor in how this plays out will be who
is in power in Islamabad. The Supreme Court’s decision to
reopen corruption cases against senior ministers and its
request for Swiss cases against President Zardari to be
revived could force new elections in which former Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif would be the likely victor. Mr Sharif
owes Britain and the United States nothing and may restrict
covert drone attacks on Pakistan’s soil.
5. Bangladesh is likely to execute five army soldiers convicted
of the murder of founding president Mujibur Rahman, the
father of current prime minister Sheikh Hasina. If it does
carry out the death sentences, it will reopen the generational
feud between the prime minister’s supporters and those of
her long-standing bitter rival Begum Khalida, whose late
husband Ziaur Rahman was accused of protecting the assassins.
The feud has blighted the country’s development.
6. Sri Lanka goes to the polls to decide who won the war:
President Mahinda Rajapaksa or his former Army chief and
now presidential rival General Sarath Fonseka? Rajapaksa
believes in one Sri Lanka without ethnic or communal divisions,
Fonseka says he believes in reconciliation for lasting peace
with the Tamil minority. The election on January 26th could
also determine the government’s attitude towards investigations
into war crimes during the 26 year civil war with the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Elaam.
7. The conflict in Nepal between the Maoists and the coalition
government is likely to intensify as Prachandra’s forces
escalate their regional rebellion and implement announcements
of autonomous states in 13 districts. The dispute centres
on army resistance to admitting Maoist guerrillas into its
ranks.
8. India’s claim to be a modern, growing global power will
be put to the test in October when it stages the Commonwealth
Games as a showcase for its progress. Preparations are alarmingly
behind schedule, and officials fear New Delhi will fail
to complete its preparations, confirming to doubters that
India is more developing than developed.
9. In December President Obama will launch a ‘thorough review’
of whether his surge of 30,000 new troops in Afghanistan
has been a success. By then the world will know if it will
ever be free of Taliban and al-Qaeda terrorism, or if it
will have find a way to talk to its leaders.
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