Explaining Support for Sectarian Terrorism in Pakistan: Piety, Maslak and Sharia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Sectarian and Other Violence in Pakistan: The Role of the Sipah-e-Sahaba-e-Pakistan
3. Extent of the Problem?
Variable | 1988–2001 | 2002–2011 | Total: 1998–2011 |
---|---|---|---|
Total Incidents, Terrorist Attacks | 2087 | 3721 | 5808 |
Total Killed, Terrorist Attacks | 2086 | 3697 | 5783 |
Total Wounded, Terrorist Attacks | 6754 | 9025 | 15,779 |
Total Incidents, Sectarian Violence | 690 | 427 | 1117 |
Total Killed, Sectarian Violence | 865 | 859 | 1724 |
Total Wounded, Sectarian Violence | 1861 | 1414 | 3275 |
Total Incidents, Other Political Violence | 11,340 | 12,820 | 24,160 |
Total Killed, Other Political Violence | 10,873 | 24,966 | 35,839 |
Total Wounded, Other Political Violence | 12,886 | 20,924 | 33,810 |
4. Literature Review and Hypotheses
4.1. Piety and Religious Practice
H1: Religious piety and practice is not positively related to support for sectarianism in Pakistan.
4.2. Islamist Politics
H2a: Support for sharia defined as good governance is negatively related to support for sectarian militancy.
H2b: Support for sharia defined as hudud is positively related to support for sectarian militancy.
H2c: Support for sharia defined as rules governing women’s public role is unrelated to support for sectarian militancy.
4.3. Maslak and Militancy
H3: Support for sectarian militancy should vary according to the maslak to which the respondent adheres.
5. Data and Research Methods
Analytical Methods
- Do you attend dars-e-Quran? (if yes, then 1)
- If yes: How many times do you go to dars-e-Quran per week on average? (scaled from 0 to 1)
- How often per week do you pray Namaz? (range scaled from 0 to 1)
- How many times did you pray Namaz in congregation in the Mosque last Sunday?10 (range scaled from 0 to 1)
- Do you pray “Tahajjud Namaz?” (if yes, 1)
- A government that restricts women’s role in the public (working, attending school, going out in public) (If agree, 1)
- A government that requires women to veil in public. (If agree, 1)
- A government that provides basic services such as health facilities, schools, garbage collection, road maintenance. (If agree, 1)
- A government that does not have corruption. (If agree, 1)
- A government that provides personal security. (If agree, 1)
- A government that provides justice through functioning non-corrupt courts. (If agree, 1)
- A government that uses physical punishments (stoning, cutting off of hands, whipping) to make sure people obey the law. (If agree, 1).
Categories | Frequency | Percentage | |
---|---|---|---|
Dependent Variable | |||
How much do you support Sipah-e-Sahaba-e-Pakistan (SSP) and their actions? | Not at all | 6176 | 37.9% |
A little | 2238 | 13.7% | |
A moderate amount | 2521 | 15.5% | |
A lot | 1287 | 7.9% | |
A great deal | 1268 | 7.8% | |
No answer | 2789 | 17.1% | |
Total | 16,279 | 100% | |
Independent variables | |||
Piety Index (0.00–1.00) | 0.00 | 912 | 5.60% |
0.04 | 1121 | 6.89% | |
0.08 | 694 | 4.26% | |
0.12 | 543 | 3.34% | |
0.16 | 721 | 4.43% | |
0.2 | 1332 | 8.18% | |
0.24 | 480 | 2.95% | |
0.28 | 1345 | 8.26% | |
0.32 | 675 | 4.15% | |
0.36 | 742 | 4.56% | |
0.4 | 1152 | 7.08% | |
0.44 | 1123 | 6.90% | |
0.48 | 714 | 4.39% | |
0.52 | 603 | 3.70% | |
0.56 | 647 | 3.97% | |
0.6 | 564 | 3.46% | |
0.64 | 656 | 4.03% | |
0.68 | 396 | 2.43% | |
0.72 | 404 | 2.48% | |
0.76 | 635 | 3.90% | |
0.8 | 107 | 0.66% | |
0.84 | 259 | 1.59% | |
0.88 | 141 | 0.87% | |
0.92 | 92 | 0.57% | |
0.96 | 220 | 1.35% | |
1.00 | 1 | 0.01% | |
Total | 16,279 | 100% | |
Sharia Good Governance Index (0.00–1.00) | 0.00 | 415 | 2.55% |
0.25 | 600 | 3.69% | |
0.5 | 1164 | 7.15% | |
0.75 | 2925 | 17.97% | |
1.00 | 11,175 | 68.65% | |
Total | 16,279 | 100% | |
Sharia Hudud Index (0.00–1.00) | 0.00 | 6913 | 42.47% |
1.00 | 9366 | 57.53% | |
Total | 16,279 | 100% | |
Sharia Women Index | 0 | 3547 | 21.79% |
0.5 | 6622 | 40.68% | |
1 | 6110 | 37.53% | |
Total | 16,279 | 100% | |
Maslak: Type of Madrassah | Shia * | 601 | 3.69% |
Sunni | 7394 | 45.42% | |
Deobandi | 5928 | 36.42% | |
Ahl-hadith | 585 | 3.59% | |
Non Muslim | 384 | 2.36% | |
Don’t know/No response | 1387 | 8.52% | |
Total | 16,279 | 100% | |
Control Variables | |||
Ethnicity | Other * | 818 | 5.03% |
Punjabi | 5325 | 32.71% | |
Muhajiir | 1073 | 6.59% | |
Pashtun | 5718 | 35.13% | |
Sindhi | 1673 | 10.28% | |
Baloch | 1566 | 9.62% | |
No response/don’t know | 106 | 0.65% | |
Total | 16,279 | 100% | |
Marital Status | Married | 12,481 | 76.67% |
Divorced | 38 | 0.23% | |
Widowed | 424 | 2.33% | |
Single/never married * | 3292 | 20.22% | |
Don’t know/ no answer | 44 | 0.27% | |
Total | 16,279 | 100% | |
Level of Education | Less than Primary * | 6354 | 39.03% |
Primary | 1951 | 11.99% | |
Middle | 2189 | 13.45% | |
Matriculate | 2875 | 17.66% | |
Higher Education | 2732 | 16.78% | |
Don’t know/no response | 178 | 1.09% | |
Total | 16,279 | 100% | |
Age Group | 18–29 * | 5945 | 36.52% |
30–49 | 7896 | 48.50% | |
50+ | 2396 | 14.7% | |
Don’t know/no response | 42 | 0.26% | |
Total | 16,279 | 100% | |
Income Quartiles | First quartile * | 5640 | 34.65% |
Second quartile | 4272 | 26.24% | |
Third quartile | 1974 | 12.13% | |
Fourth quartile | 3162 | 19.42% | |
Don’t know/no response | 1231 | 7.56% | |
Total | 16,279 | 100% |
6. Discussion of Regression Results
No District Fixed Effects | With District Fixed Effects | |
---|---|---|
Independent Variables | ||
piety_ind_rounded | 0.400 (3.84) ** | 0.174 (1.82) |
sharia_gg_ind | −0.457 (−4.61) ** | −0.172 (−1.74) |
sharia_h_ind | 0.125 (2.57) * | −0.026 (−0.54) |
sharia_wom_ind | −0.223 (−3.88) ** | −0.079 (−1.54) |
madrasa_sunni | 0.754 (8.94) ** | 0.516 (4.23) ** |
madrasa_deobandi | 0.953 (10.59) ** | 0.708 (5.38) ** |
madrasa_ahl_e_hadis | 0.823 (6.16) ** | 0.646 (4.04) ** |
Control Variables | ||
maritalstatus_married | 0.079 (1.78) | 0.092 (2.29) * |
maritalstatus_divorced | 0.200 (0.57) | 0.233 (0.73) |
maritalstatus_widowed | 0.140 (1.32) | 0.132 (1.33) |
ethnicity_punjabi | −0.283 (−2.45) * | −0.294 (−2.27) * |
Control Variables | ||
ethnicity_muhajir | −0.560 (−4.30) ** | −0.129 (−0.94) |
ethnicity_pashtun | −0.153 (−1.29) | −0.162 (−1.13) |
ethnicity_sindhi | −0.691 (−5.40) ** | −0.492 (−3.17)** |
ethnicity_baloch | −0.537 (−3.81) ** | −0.343 (−2.16)* |
educ_primary | −0.098 (−2.04) * | −0.064 (−1.46) |
educ_middle | −0.070 (−1.44) | −0.039 (−0.90) |
educ_matric | −0.084 (−1.67) | −0.036 (−0.77) |
educ_higher | −0.158 (−2.97) ** | −0.084 (−1.70) |
age_30to49 | −0.062 (−1.71) | −0.041 (−1.27) |
age_50plus | −0.296 (−5.85) ** | −0.218 (−4.74) ** |
quartile_second | 0.008 (0.20) | −0.012 (−0.34) |
quartile_third | 0.011 (0.20) | −0.035 (−0.72) |
quartile_fourth | 0.072 (1.45) | −0.031 (−0.64) |
_cons | 1.049 (5.84) ** | 1.022 (5.21) ** |
R2 | 0.08 | 0.21 |
N | 11,601 | 11,601 |
7. Conclusions and Implications
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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- 1Per the so-called BFRS [29] dataset “terrorist attacks” are defined by attacks on noncombatants conducted by violent groups in effort to advance a political goal. Sectarian attacks are a sub-set of these terrorist incidents in the BFRS dataset. Between 1988 and 2011, the BFRS dataset records 1.724 deaths. This is most certainly an under-estimate because the BFRS coders could code an attack as “sectarian” only if the article described the attack in such terms.
- 2In Pakistan, there are five main interpretative traditions of Islam (masalik, plural of maslak). In addition to the Shia maslak, which itself has multiple sects, there are four Sunni masalik: Barelvi, Deobandi, Ahl-e-Hadith, and Jamaat-e-Islami (which is also a political party that purports to be supra-sectarian). Each maslak has its own definition of sharia and looks to different sources of Islamic legitimacy.
- 3Neither the PML-N nor the TTP are themselves directly purveyors of violence even if there are groups that may conduct political violence on their behalf on various occasions. It is common throughout South Asia for political parties to have armed militias and/or thuggish student wings [60].
- 4The first two correspond to Hypotheses 1 and 2 in [62].
- 5Advocates of this view often reference “the verse of the sword” in the Quran (Sura 9:5) to justify the link between religious practice and militancy: “Then, when the sacred months have passed, slay the idolaters wherever ye find them, and take them captive, and besiege them, and prepare for them each ambush.”
- 6Kaltenthaler et al. [76] similarly find that Pakistanis who were more accepting of the imposition of extreme Islamist views (often called “Talibanization”) were more likely to believe that attacks on civilians could be justified. There have been other studies that focus upon political beliefs that are not easily classified as “political Islam.” Specific political grievances are one of the few reliable determinants of support for militant actions. Chiozza [79] finds that among Muslims in Jordan and Lebanon, the strongest predictor of support for suicide bombings against American forces in Iraq was disaffection towards the American people, not religiosity, and that religiosity was associated with support for attacks only when accompanied by fear for Muslim identity. Similarly, research on Palestinian public opinion towards Israel has repeatedly found that the perception of Israel as posing a threat is strongly associated with support for violence, but that support for political Islam exhibits no association [80,81,82]. National surveys of Algeria and Jordan in 2002 also showed that while higher levels of religious involvement did not make individuals more likely to approve of terrorist acts against the US, there was a significant relationship between respondents’ attitudes towards their government and US foreign policy and their support for terrorism [62].
- 7While some of the Ahl-e-Hadith ulema in Pakistan have rejected militarized jihad waged by any actor other than the state, Lashkar-e-Taiba (now known as Jamaat ud Dawa) is the only jihadi group in Pakistan that is associated with the Ahl-e-Hadith masalik [85].
- 8Among various Muslim women’s blogs the issue of the “ho-jabi” is a serious affair. The etymology is a play on words of the original “hejab” and the misogynist epithet of “ho” or “hoe” for a promiscuous woman. A thorough discussion of this social phenomenon is beyond the scope of the paper. But this serious debate among young women is a testament to the varying valence of “hejab” as a not-so-entirely pietic marking. See blog posts variously from [87,88,89] among numerous others including microblogs on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest and the like.
- 9This is not to say that madaris are the only sites of religious education in Pakistan. In fact, Pakistanis receive such education in the public schools as well and many private schools also teach religious and non-religious subjects. In some cases, private schools have even blended the entire madrassah curriculum such that students will have attained the title of alim upon completion of either ten or twelve years of schooling [90].
- 10As is well known, the most important day of prayer is Friday. For many men, they only got to a mosque on a Friday. For this reasons, we deliberately chose an “off day” to measure prayer attendance in a mosque. In Pakistan, few women are encouraged to prayer in a mosque and thus they do their prayers at home.
© 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Fair, C.C. Explaining Support for Sectarian Terrorism in Pakistan: Piety, Maslak and Sharia. Religions 2015, 6, 1137-1167. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel6041137
Fair CC. Explaining Support for Sectarian Terrorism in Pakistan: Piety, Maslak and Sharia. Religions. 2015; 6(4):1137-1167. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel6041137
Chicago/Turabian StyleFair, C. Christine. 2015. "Explaining Support for Sectarian Terrorism in Pakistan: Piety, Maslak and Sharia" Religions 6, no. 4: 1137-1167. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel6041137
APA StyleFair, C. C. (2015). Explaining Support for Sectarian Terrorism in Pakistan: Piety, Maslak and Sharia. Religions, 6(4), 1137-1167. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel6041137