It is an age-old chicken and egg question. Does the prevalence of guns lead to more crimes or does the increase in crime rates force people to carry more firearms for protection? It all depends on which side you are on in the guns debate. Following the Army Public School
carrying them out.
The presence of CCTV cameras, barbed wires on boundaries, sentries on the walls will certainly act as a deterrent but only to a certain extent. How well teachers and support staff with limited training will fare against a group of well-armed experienced and violent men is a question one shudders to even think of.
Rather than handing over the responsibility of protecting their charges from danger, school staff should be left to perform their own duties. Weapons training is well and good but greater focus should be on evacuation plans, escape routes and properly conducted emergency drills. These are the areas we are falling behind in and have never really even considered much in the past which, while surprising given the number of terrorist attacks in Pakistan, is not all that different from our usual apathetic response to danger.
One hopes that the new security measures will not just be limited to photo-op worthy weapons training drills and installation of security equipment. These, frankly, are little more than window dressing given the serious and imminent nature of the threats that we are facing. We as a nation need to realise that our habit of siding with violence has contributed in bringing us to the disastrous stage we are at today.
The need for a shift in thinking does not seem like a solution to terrorism but without it we will continue to serve as a breeding ground for terrorists and continue to suffer from losses caused by their actions.
The writer is a business studies graduate from southern Punjab. Email: asna.ali90 gmail.com