“My sister is there, in Wana [the principal town in South Waziristan] and there are people who are sick or injured but they have received no help,” Shaheena Bibi, 40, who left the tribal territory a month ago with her family, told IRIN. “No one is doing anything about the people who have lost everything in South Waziristan,” she said, comparing their treatment unfavourably with those displaced from Swat Valley earlier in the year.
“We can’t understand why more of these Western agencies and NGOs are not helping the people of Waziristan,” she said.
Despite the readiness of aid agencies to help internally displaced persons (IDPs) - and even people in their homes in South Waziristan - access has been consistently denied by the military.
“We want to go to aid people and have even tried to do so, but the military guards the entry points and turns us back,” Ronnie Palomar, deputy head of mission of the Paris-based Médecins Sans Frontières told IRIN, adding: “South Waziristan is a very highly militarized zone. People coming out of it are going into other areas guarded by the military.”
While some local NGOs have been allowed to work with IDPs based in Dera Ismail Khan and Tank, the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) districts that border South Waziristan, staff say military control is tight.
“Sometimes it is very hard to talk freely to people about their situation, because of the heavy police and military presence,” said a female NGO worker who asked not to be named. She said security personnel often “tried to help” but “their uniforms intimidate people.”
“The government is not encouraging foreign NGOs to directly assist IDPs from South Waziristan due to security concerns,” Lt-Gen Nadeem Ahmed of the military’s Special Support Group told a press conference in Islamabad on 1 November. He also said it was “possible” militants were mingling with IDPs.
Bombings
A spate of recent bombings across Pakistan has prompted the UN Secretary-General to announce heightened security measures in NWFP and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas for its staff.
![]() Photo: Abdul Majeed Goraya/IRIN ![]() |
| The aftermath of another bomb blast in Pakistan. Intense security concerns are affecting humanitarian access in South Waziristan |
“They seem to fear we may be kidnapped or something,” Sebastien Brack, spokesperson for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), told IRIN.
He said access was being denied and security cited as the reason for this, despite the fact that the ICRC “has received guarantees of safety from all groups involved in South Waziristan and has conveyed to [the] authorities [that] we are in a unique position to help.”
New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) has called for help for civilians trapped in the zone of fighting. “If aid agencies can’t reach these people, it could be a catastrophe,” Ali Dayan Hasan, senior South Asia researcher for HRW, said.
Those who have fled the conflict-hit areas are worried about those left behind. “People are getting hurt in the aerial bombardment. They have no medicines. Children are sick and frightened and things will only get worse once winter sets in,” said Dilawar Khan, who lives in Peshawar but has family in South Waziristan.
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