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Pakistan's 'secret' war in Baluchistan

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Pro-govt lashkar formed in Dera Bugti

DERA BUGTI: Aali Khan Bugti, a grandson of veteran Baloch leader Nawab Akbar Bugti, has formed a tribal lashkar for protecting national installations and restoring peace in the district. Shaier Bugti, spokesman for the lashkar, told reporters that the lashkar had been formed to stop target killings of Bugti tribesmen and maintain peace in the area. Armed supporters of Aali Bugti on Wednesday set up pickets on a number of roads and started patrolling the district. app

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
DAWN NEWS, www.dawn.com, Sunday March 8, 2009

ISLAMABAD PLANS TO PIT TALIBAN AGAINST SECULAR BALOCH NATIONALISTS

Tehrik-i-Taliban Balochistan (TTB) Formed: Is Balochistan Becoming the Next Swat?

As Pakistan’s internationally acclaimed journalist, Ahmed Rashid, laments in his book Descent into Chaos, “Today, seven years after 9/11, Mullah Omar and the original Afghan Taliban Shura still live in Balochistan province.”

A Baloch nationalist leader, Sanaullah Baloch, also bemoans the presence of Taliban supporters who have captured land worth Rs2bn along the eastern and western bypass of Quetta. These quarters are now virtual no-go areas. Islamabad, nonetheless, has been in a state of constant denial.

The Taliban have now vociferously asserted their existence in Balochistan. Engineer Asad, a self-proclaimed spokesman of the newly formed Tehrik-i-Taliban Balochistan (TTB), was recently quoted in a newspaper as saying that their struggle was “against non-Muslims and western forces that had attacked and occupied Islamic countries … the TTB was committed to fighting the enemies of Islam”. The TTB, as reported, disassociates itself from Baitullah Mehsud’s Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), bills suicide bombing as un-Islamic and rules out any vendetta with the Sherani faction of the JUI.

After the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, the ISI-CIA-nexus enthusiastically exported this jihad from Quetta to Afghanistan. During the Taliban regime, Islamabad went overboard in its support for their rule in Kabul by setting up a telephone network, which became a part of the Pakistan telephone grid. Hence one could dial Kandahar from anywhere in Pakistan as a domestic call, with the same code as Quetta.

For Islamabad, the post-Taliban era coincided with the rise of the nationalistic insurgency in Balochistan. The Islamists were given protection in Quetta so that they could serve Islamabad’s interest against progressive and secular Baloch forces. The centre is confident that a bribed mullah is certain to serve as a reliable collaborator against the mounting Baloch nationalist movement.

In fact, over the past many years Quetta has been used as a training ground by the Taliban as they have been blowing up Internet cafes, music and CD shops in the city for long. There is growing fear that the Taliban can surface with a Swat-like showdown any time in the near future.

The Taliban presence is substantiated by the fact that not a single incident of suicide bombing has ever been reported by Baloch insurgents who have confronted the centre five times since the controversial accession of Balochistan to Pakistan in 1948. Suicide bombing is purely a Taliban-related phenomenon in this region and in the recent past, Quetta city has been the hub of continuous suicide bombings.

For instance, on Feb 17, 2007, 13 people, including a senior judge, were killed and several others injured in a suicide bomb attack in a district court. On Dec 13, 2007, seven people were killed in another suicide bombing incident. Last year, on Sept 24, two persons, including a teenaged girl, were killed and 22 people were injured in a suicide bomb explosion. An earlier suicide bomb attack on Sept 9 took place at a religious school in the outskirts of Quetta; it left five dead and 12 students were injured. The latest suicide attack on March 2 in Pishin also took six lives.

Ironically, Islamabad eliminated Baloch leaders Nawab Bugti and Balaach Marri on the pretext that they had challenged the ‘writ of the state’. But to date, not a single bullet has been fired at Islamists who are training suicide bombers and murdering innocent civilians in the name of religion.

The discourse on moderate and extremist Taliban is ridiculous. A Talib will always remain a narrow-minded, conservative barbarian, bent upon killing until people subscribe to his bizarre and irrational interpretation of Islam. Today, the Taliban are operating in Balochistan with a better strategy. No longer are they willing to put all their eggs in one basket. The proponents of the Taliban, often described as ‘moderate religious forces’, are fast penetrating the secular Baloch province by getting elected to the provincial legislature with overwhelming financial assistance from intelligence agencies, according to some reports.

In the 2002 general elections, the pro-Taliban JUI-F secured16 seats in the Balochistan Assembly. In the incumbent Balochistan Assembly, the JUI-F has 10 seats — a political front for the clandestine backing provided to the Taliban.

Secondly, the Lashkar-i-Jhangvi, another brainchild of the establishment, is out to crush democratic and secular forces in the conflict-ridden province. On Jan 26, the outlawed group killed the chairman of the Hazara Democratic Party (HDP) Hussain Ali Yousafi. Such attacks are likely to transform Quetta into an intol

erant place where one would eventually have to be a practisng Sunni Muslim to clinch a ‘residential permit’ from the ‘custodians of Islam’.

The Talibanisation of Balochistan, a province which shares borders with Iran and Afghanistan, is going to be catastrophic. The policymakers in Islamabad should recognise that if the secular Baloch province falls into the hands of fanatics, it will not only jeopardise the integrity of the federation, but also cause unrest in the entire region.

Al Qaeda would surely use this area as a hub for further terrorist attacks on Nato and American forces and pro-US Gulf countries. Undoubtedly, when carrying out political transactions in Balochistan, both Islamabad and the international community must give preference to the democratic and secular Baloch over obscurantist Taliban forces.

The writer is a journalist based in Quetta.
 
Its worth noting in this context that Baluch nationalist leaders were killed relatively easily by pakistan's security forces even when in hiding. When it comes to Talban, the forces seem helpless.
 
Its worth noting in this context that Baluch nationalist leaders were killed relatively easily by pakistan's security forces even when in hiding. When it comes to Talban, the forces seem helpless.


Yeah but you can't compare the two groups. Baloch Nationalists were a much bigger threat since their aim was to destroy the nation. The Taliban on the other hand (obviously they are a headache too!!) but their fight is an idealogical fight (imposition of Islamic Law) and has nothing to do with destroying Pak's existance. In my opinion they are a lesser threat in that sense and so can not be put on the same boat as the Nationalists. The swift destruction of the Baloch Nationalists was essential since they posed a real threat to the State and were defying its existence.

And secondly, wether the Taliban truly exist in Balochistan and are operating there is debatable, because so far there hasn't been any major issues in Balochistan in which any kind of Taliban activity can be said to be involved. So far these claims made by the media have just been 'hot air'. That is the primary reason for the Government ignoring this issue. The lack of involvement on the Government's part should not be seen as some kind of 'helplessness'... :angry::angry:
 
Yeah but you can't compare the two groups. Baloch Nationalists were a much bigger threat since their aim was to destroy the nation. The Taliban on the other hand (obviously they are a headache too!!) but their fight is an idealogical fight (imposition of Islamic Law) and has nothing to do with destroying Pak's existance. In my opinion they are a lesser threat in that sense and so can not be put on the same boat as the Nationalists. The swift destruction of the Baloch Nationalists was essential since they posed a real threat to the State and were defying its existence.

And secondly, wether the Taliban truly exist in Balochistan and are operating there is debatable, because so far there hasn't been any major issues in Balochistan in which any kind of Taliban activity can be said to be involved. So far these claims made by the media have just been 'hot air'. That is the primary reason for the Government ignoring this issue. The lack of involvement on the Government's part should not be seen as some kind of 'helplessness'... :angry::angry:

Its hard to say who is more destructive. Surely Taliban with their massive logisitics support in Afghanistan and FATA can open up another front against Pakistan.
Remember, Taliban with their narrow minded interpretation of Islam are against Pakistan as well. Hopefully ISI are not planning to pit, the Taliban against BLA , because it can bite them in the long term and become another headache for Pakistan.
Indian intelligence is also very active in Balochistan and if they manage to combine Taliban with BLA, then there will be a lot of instability.
 
Secondly, the Lashkar-i-Jhangvi, another brainchild of the establishment, is out to crush democratic and secular forces in the conflict-ridden province. On Jan 26, the outlawed group killed the chairman of the Hazara Democratic Party (HDP) Hussain Ali Yousafi. Such attacks are likely to transform Quetta into an intolerant place where one would eventually have to be a practisng Sunni Muslim to clinch a ‘residential permit’ from the ‘custodians of Islam’.

So this Lashkar-i-Jhangvi, a creation of the Pakistani state is now attacking Sri Lankan Cricketers?

Very sad. These people have not learnt their lesson and are still using radical Islam in order to further their own agenda.
 
Secular Baloch nationalists? aka Balochistan Liberation Army a terrorist organization funded by India. So for us TTP funded by India and CIA is similar to BLA of India.

Ahmed Rashid is a known CIA stooge and had been having close relations with India.

We do underestand from where he is coming.

bhartis will be happy over his statments.
 
Yeah but you can't compare the two groups. Baloch Nationalists were a much bigger threat since their aim was to destroy the nation. The Taliban on the other hand (obviously they are a headache too!!) but their fight is an idealogical fight (imposition of Islamic Law) and has nothing to do with destroying Pak's existance. In my opinion they are a lesser threat in that sense and so can not be put on the same boat as the Nationalists. The swift destruction of the Baloch Nationalists was essential since they posed a real threat to the State and were defying its existence.

And secondly, wether the Taliban truly exist in Balochistan and are operating there is debatable, because so far there hasn't been any major issues in Balochistan in which any kind of Taliban activity can be said to be involved. So far these claims made by the media have just been 'hot air'. That is the primary reason for the Government ignoring this issue. The lack of involvement on the Government's part should not be seen as some kind of 'helplessness'... :angry::angry:

Not at all, taliban want to destroy pakistna as they do not belive in national boundaries, they also HATE the way the pakistanis live their daily lives - watcing TV and music and wearing western clothes! the system of people voting for their leader is considered blasphemy by taliban - if they can't destroy pakistan, who can? but yet the 'useful' taliban have not been crushed, i mean their leaders. there's either inability or unwillingness, which is it? u rejected inablility.

baloch on the other hand don't care abt what pakistanis do, they are just fighting for their cause, which they consider a noble just cause of their freedom from occupation and illegal annexation.
 
Too Many Secrets....


The past week was by all accounts a momentous one, as no less a person than former Pakistani President and former Chief of the Army Staff, Gen (Ret'd) Pervez Musharraf, assertively disclosed what has been a 'no-go' area for India's mainstream media and the otherwise hyper-ventilating broadcast media thus far: that India's Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) has, since 2002, waged a highly successful covert war against Pakistan by actively rendering all kinds of financial assistance to Balochistan-based separatists.

But mind you, such covert warfare has not been waged by the Research & Analysis Wing (RAW), but by the tri-services DIA and Afghanistan's Riyast-i-Amniyat-i-Milli, and in addition to his routine assignment as India's Defence Adviser at the Embassy in Kabul, Brigadier Ravi Datt Mehta was officially dolling out huge financial assistance--as ordered by the DIA--to the Baloch separatists as and when required.

For the past one year such activities being undertaken by the DIA wer, in fact, openly discussed by both serving and retired senior military officials at both the Armed Forces Gymkhana and the United Services Institution within the National Capital Region. It, therefore, did not come as a great surprise to South Block when Brig Mehta was specifically targetted for assassination by the Pakistan Army's Peshawar-based 324 Military Intelligence Battalion .

This in many ways is reminiscent of the era ranging from the mid-1980s and early 1990s during which RAW had succeeded in gaining the trust of what would later morph into the Northern Alliance. In fact, by 1986, despite India's official recognition of the then Soviet-backed Afghan regime led by Dr Najibullah, India had begun extending medical assistance to the guerrilla forces led by the legendary leader Ahmad Shah Massoud and as a consequence of this, one wing of the All India Institute of Medical Science (AIIMS) was completely cordoned off by South Block and it was there that all those Mujahideen wounded in battle while fighting the Soviets under Massoud's leadership received the urgent medical attention that they deserved. So impressed was the Northern Alliance by India's humanitarian assistance that this relationship, at first opportunity, got elevated to a higher level when, in the early 1990s after the breakup of the USSR, the Northern Alliance succeeded in securing Tajikistan's approval for an Indian Army-run field hospital to be established at Farkhor.

Last week also saw BrahMos Aerospace successfully test-firing the Block 2 version of the BrahMos supersonic multi-role cruise missile's land attack variant. But here again, India's mainstream media failed to illustrate what has thus far been a severe shortcoming for both BrahMos Aerospace and the Defence Research & Development Organisation (DRDO): there are NO available firing ranges in India that can host test-firings of surface-to-surface or air-to-surface battlefield support missiles (like the BrahMos or Prithvi SS-150/SS-250) out to their maximum range envelopes! The firing range at Pokhran where such missiles are routinely test-fired, measures at most 58km and that too after two villages have been temporarily evacuated, even though the DRDO has been pleading with the MoD since the late 1990s for making available a firing range that can support missile firings out to 100km over land.

Yet another revelation for me last week was an update on the launch status of the nuclear-powered Advanced Technology Vehicle (ATV): the new Project Director has, rightly, adopted a cautious attitude towards advancing the launch-date of the hull by conducting a thorough and controlled 'flushing' of the ATV's complex network of steam piping associated with the vessel's BHEL-built heat exchanger, which had previously proved to be quite problematic. In addition, the new-design vertical silo for housing a yet-to-be-available 8,500km-range submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) is now being removed from the ATV's hull as the priority is to--as part of the ATV's multi-phase sea trials schedule--firstly, establish the ATV's hull integrity under operational conditions, and secondly, to establish the functional maturity of the ATV's nuclear propulsion system.

Only after these two milestones have been achieved that the weaponisation phase will be put to effect. The Govt of India's Cabinet Committee on National Security last January decided to accord only 'conditional & on principal' approval for constructing two ATV-derived vessels: one being the SSBN and the other being the escorting SSN.--Prasun K. Sengupta

Coming up soon: how the Indian Navy recently saved the Scorpene SSK project from being scuttled by the already-concluded investigations into allegations of corruptions, and how exactly the 'agents' involved with the deal and their principals succeeded in legally covering up their tracks and skirting around the 'Integrity Clause' that was integral to the procurement contract.

TRISHUL: Too Many Secrets....
 
Five Balochistan ministers resign over CM’s ‘attitude’

LAHORE: Five ministers of the Balochistan cabinet, from the Pakistan People’s Party, have quit their portfolios in protest at the ‘attitude’ of provincial Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani, a private TV channel reported on Wednesday. According to the channel, the ministers who have announced their resignations are Sadiq Imrani, Amin Imrani, Agha Irfan, Asfandyar Kakar and Jan Ali Changaizi. The ministers would hand over their resignations to President Asif Ali Zardari on Thursday.
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Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
Supporting the Taliban against the Baloch's is like cutting your nose to spite your face. The enemy of the enemy is not always your friend.
We are destined to make the same stupid mistakes made by our Hindu friends when they supported Bhindranwale and the LTTE and that cost them two Prime Ministers (amongst other problems.)

The Taliban are NOT the way forward to make Pakistan an industrial and economic giant. The sooner our generals realize that winning this battle with the Taliban on our side will lead us to lose the war.
 
President for resolving Balochistan issues
Updated at: 2245 PST, Thursday, March 26, 2009


QUETTA: President Asif Ali Zardari said on Thursday that the government would resolve problems of Balochistan on priority basis to bring progress and prosperity in the province.

Addressing the provincial cabinet members here at Balochistan CM Secretariat, the President said that the federal government would implement the recommendations presented by the cabinet members for improving law and order, maintaining peace, and initiating development projects in Balochistan.

He said the government would also release funds for the completion of various ongoing development projects.

The President said the government was speeding up the oil and gas exploration, and taking initiatives for providing protection to the exploring companies in the province.

Speaking on the occasion, Balochistan cabinet members lauded the reconciliatory role of the President, and said it had improved not only the political atmosphere in Balochistan, but also improved political environment in the country.

They thanked the PPP-led government and the President for taking practical steps for the progress and prosperity of the people of Balochistan.

President for resolving Balochistan issues
 
Political crisis in Balochistan averted
Friday, March 27, 2009
By our correspondent

QUETTA: The political crisis was resolved in Balochistan for the time being when State Minister for Shipping and Ports Nabeel Gabol on Thursday announced that Balochistan Chief Minister Nawab Muhammad Aslam Raisani had stopped the notification on the sacking of five provincial ministers.

The announcement to this effect came minutes before the arrival of President Asif Ali Zardari. Addressing a hurriedly called press conference at the Chief Minister’s House, Nabeel Gabool, who arrived in Quetta ahead of President Zardari, said the political crisis had been averted in Balochistan because apprehensions of the provincial ministers (who earlier announced their resignations) had been removed and now every thing was all right.

It may be mentioned here that in a dramatic move, five provincial ministers of Nawab Muhammad Aslam Raisani-led coalition government announced that they were resigning against the attitude of Chief Minister Raisani. Those who had announced their resignations were: Provincial Communication and Works Minister Mir Muhammad Sadiq Umrani, Babu Muhammad Amin Umrani, Asfandyar Kakar, Jan Ali Changezi and Agha Irfan Karim.

Talking to reporters, Sadiq Umrani had said some more provincial ministers were ready to resign. Later, he said he and other ministers would not resign but compel Raisani to step down as the chief minister. In the meantime, Chief Minister Raisani sacked all the five provincial ministers.

The decision came after his meeting with Nabeel Gabool and Balochistan S&GAD Minister Sardar Sanaullah Zehri.Afterwards, talking to Geo TV, Nawab Raisani confirmed the sacking of the provincial ministers, and alleged that Mir Muhammad Sadiq Umrani wanted to become the chief minister. He said the sacking of ministers would not cause any political crisis in the province.

However, the political temperature was diluted when Nabeel Gabool addressed a hurriedly called press conference in the Chief Minister’s House. He said the notification of the sacked provincial ministers had been stopped and the political crisis had been averted in the province. He said differences within the party would be resolved by sitting together.

Political crisis in Balochistan averted
 
Balochistan’s needs

Friday, 27 Mar, 2009

FOR a change, Balochistan has lately been in the news for the right reasons. Instead of acts of sabotage or attacks by insurgents, the emphasis has been on putting Pakistan’s least developed province on the path to prosperity. And there is absolutely no reason why Balochistan cannot thrive given its immense natural wealth. It is endowed with fossil fuels such as oil and gas, and is home to huge reserves of precious metals, among them gold and copper. The sad truth is that Balochistan has been neglected by the centre from day one. Its resources have been exploited to fuel engines of growth elsewhere in the country, with little benefit accruing to the people of the province. Only a few tribal sardars, whose very survival is linked to keeping the masses backward and subjugated, have flourished under the policies adopted so far. Promises of autonomy have been reneged on consistently and uprisings rooted in nationalism crushed with brute force. Against this backdrop, it is not surprising that many in Balochistan feel alienated and find it difficult to define their province’s role in the federation. A sense of exploitation by the other units, particularly Punjab, is rife among the Baloch people and understandably so.

The PPP made a healthy move in February last year when it offered a public apology to the people of Balochistan by acknowledging “the atrocities and injustices committed” against the province. Later, Balochistan’s overdraft with the State Bank was converted into a soft loan, giving the province some much-needed financial respite. But the centre has not lived up to its promise of allowing the provinces greater autonomy and control over their resources by scrapping the concurrent list, nor has much headway been made in hammering out new criteria for the National Finance Commission award. As the minister of state for ports and shipping pointed out on Wednesday, Balochistan’s grievances need to be addressed at the earliest. In this connection, the president’s forthcoming trip to the province can, if honesty of purpose is to be assumed, make significant headway in addressing pending disputes. The insurgency is no longer raging in Balochistan and this is the time for the federating units to give the province their undivided attention. Investment is needed urgently — in industry, schools, vocational institutes, healthcare, road networks. Failure to do so will not only stoke the fires of nationalism but may also drive young, unemployed people into the hands of the obscurantists.
 
We the Pakistanis have lots of complaints about mismanagement by our Leaders, and yet we the common people are fooled by some greedy people and use us to fulfill their traitors designs by trying to destroy the country and to pay them big money if not than they ask for separation, to ask for separation is unpatriotic and it is asking country to pay for the sins of nincompoops.

We the Pakistanis should think hard and should act as patriots and think not what Pakistan can do for you, think what you can do for Pakistan.
 
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