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Independence Day in Quetta —Shaukat Qadir

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COMMENT: Independence Day in Quetta —Shaukat Qadir

I can bear testimony that on the night of August 13, through the day and well past midnight on August 14, vehicles clogged the roads, flying the national flag. The turnout in the streets of Quetta was heart warming

I must begin by admitting that my visits to Balochistan in the last few years have been very infrequent; in fact, I last visited Quetta in 2004. The obvious consequence is that I had lost touch with all my old friends from Balochistan, Pashtun and Baloch; and I had a lot of them, of varying age groups and varying backgrounds.

I must also admit that, in the absence of any personal information, I was influenced by the media hype regarding the looming threat in Balochistan. Nawab Akbar Bugti’s murder, the unanimous outcry of the Baloch, and the frequent media coverage of acts of violence did nothing to diminish my apprehensions. One senior Baloch officer went so far as to tell me that ‘all Baloch were expectantly awaiting a US intervention and only biding their time’. However, that I found difficult to accept!

As it happened, I was afforded an opportunity to visit Balochistan this month. It was a business trip, of the kind that could be combined with pleasure, and I had a few days at my disposal. Partly through compulsion, my visit included the sixty-second independence day of the country, August 14.

Since the purpose of my visit included an assessment of the Balochistan situation, I was expected to visit places outside Quetta as well, which suited me perfectly. I was fortunate to be put in touch with a local bureaucrat, who was an ideal conduit. If he didn’t know everybody, he knew someone who knew those that he personally did not. The result was that I was able to get in touch with numerous old friends, ex-soldiers (mostly Pashtun), ex-senior bureaucrats — one of them had been the chief secretary of Balochistan — who were tribal leaders in their own rights by now, other tribal elders, and individuals heading NGOs. Also, courtesy my brother, a professor of history currently heading the History Commission, I was also able to interact with his Baloch students, now also professors in universities or in other positions of authority.

Due to paucity of time, I could not venture too far from Quetta (I intend to atone for that on another trip, shortly after Eid); however, I did visit some Pashtun areas and some Baloch ones within a hundred-mile radius of Quetta, some of them are counted among the ‘Red Zones’, so-called areas of high threat. While there were bearded individuals visible in the Pashtun belt, who were identified by locals as Taliban, they were unarmed.

I have been aware of the influx of Afghan refugees in Balochistan, many of them Taliban, and of the fact that while they have organised a ‘shura’, it is presently lying low. I was also aware that this influx had upset the ethnic ratio of Balochistan in favour of the Pashtun. Considerable apprehension had been expressed by a number of individuals regarding the increase in Pashtun refugees in the wake of US operations in the Helmand province of Afghanistan. This apprehension turned out to be unfounded. What I was not prepared for was the number of Hazaras that had come from Afghanistan into Balochistan.

Anyway, the crux of what I learned during this visit was that the threat in Balochistan is grossly exaggerated; apparently, that suits some individuals. The level of disgruntlement among the Baloch is high, less among the Pashtun, who are economically better off. However, a serious attempt to redress their grievances would swiftly kill the ill-will.

There are die-hard Baloch separatists, led by Brahamdagh Bugti, but they are few in number and, in their area(s) of domination, are well known to the locals who do not identify them to the authorities, since these people are expressing a collective resentment. But the locals believe they can bring be brought to heel, whenever necessary.

The surprising conclusion that I reached, which was verified by the ethnic Baloch university teachers and individuals working with NGOs, was that, like some of the tribes in the NWFP but for totally different reasons, there is no longer any Baloch tribe that is unified under one leader, with the sole exception of the Magsi tribe — an infinitely small tribe with an insignificant land holding. The Pashtuns still have their traditional leadership.

Brahamdagh could have united the Bugtis, but many of the Bugtis are disillusioned with his announced leanings towards India; what is more, he has fled the country and none of the old Nawab’s nephews, including Aali, enjoy his unchallenged authority, even with government support. All the other tribal areas have been split up and some scion of the original leaders of each tribe claims influence over a portion of the original tribal areas. The elders in each tribe no longer exercise the control they used to. The situation is similar to what was prevalent in Afghanistan after the Soviet withdrawal in 1989.

Indian involvement is universally acknowledged, but ironically, much of it is being shared by the Pashtun organisation ‘Jundullah’, which is opposed to the concept of separatism. They span the border with Iran and parts of the border with Afghanistan.

Among the rank and file of the Baloch tribes, this is considered a priceless opportunity for the government to get rid of the traditionally cruel ‘Sardari’ system while redressing their grievances. However, they are unanimously sceptical that the government will actually do so, considering that it continues to nurture scions of the Sardari system, however weak they might be in their own areas.

One thing that the Pashtun and the Baloch are agreed upon is that the Taliban will never be allowed to reign supreme in Balochistan; against the Taliban, both will take up arms.

This is going to be another opportunity lost to the interests of individuals, who are deliberately exaggerating the threat so as to retain their influence, even if it is only within grossly reduced areas. ‘Whilst there s life, there is hope’, but our leaders invariably ensure it is minimised.

Much has been made of the burning of Pakistani flags and that schools have been warned not to start the day with the national anthem. However, clear warnings were issued by the separatists about celebrating Independence Day also and dire consequences were threatened, including suicide attacks. I can bear testimony that on the night of August 13, through the day and well past midnight on August 14, vehicles clogged the roads, flying the national flag. The turnout in the streets of Quetta was heart warming, with people singing, dancing, celebrating, playing songs of national loyalty, without a single untoward incident, well into the night.

Even in the suburbs of Quetta along the road to Ziarat, I could see national flags adorning numerous houses, all the way up to Kuchlag during daytime. I wonder why all this did not receive such extensive coverage by the electronic media.

I enjoyed spending Independence Day this year in Quetta and hope to do so again.

This article is a modified version of one originally written for the daily ‘National’. The writer is a former vice president and founder of the Islamabad Policy Research Insititute (IPRI)

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\08\29\story_29-8-2009_pg3_4
 
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When i read this i was so happy. Our media does a really bad job of portraying the situation on the ground.
Pakistan Zindabad
 
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Now that will shut down the mouth who speaks about Baluchistan Independence.. And author is right, that why Baluchistan don't get too much attention from electronic media.. The answer could be, "Since they want to put suspicion in people minds.. "
 
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Wonderful to read FM, thanks for posting.

It is a wonder that the national media has chosen to cover the issues of Baluchistan in such a one sided way - but then, the world over, it is negative news that sells.

And perhaps were it not for the alarmist and 'impending doom' coverage, our leaders would not be stung into action to resolve the issues, which as it is they are taking their sweet time in doing.
 
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Baloch issues will not get solved till Sardari system ends and the Baloch bring up their economy on their own.

They need to send their children to school for one. The literacy rate in Balochistan is appalling, which naturally leads to poorer economy and a low standard of living. This makes it easy to sow resentment against the rest of the nation where the situation is pretty good by comparison.

Also I think we need a change in our laws. Natural resources should not be federal property but by provincial property and they should get a cut out of whatever is purchased by the other provinces. This would make money flow internally within the nation and won't be lopsided away from Baluchistan which has many natural resources.

We can put in laws where the province MUST share the resources and not horde it off in petty provincial rivalries but proper compensation is a must.
 
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FATMAN17 , my kind sir

I am happier than happy to read this article.

My heart goes out to each and every baloch, and every oppressed pakistani else where also.

I invite you to reach out to our brothers in Balochistan, and together
we the youth will thus be in a position to root our this feudal system
which has plagued our country.

Let us all be free, Let us all be Pakistanis, Let us do all that under leadership
from Baloch youth.
 
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Balochistan situation getting bleaker by the day

Malik Siraj Akbar

On August 29, Pakistan’s volatile Balochistan province marked the third death anniversary of its slain leader, Nawab Akbar Bugti, amid widespread violence. Ten people were killed; several gas pipelines blown up and electricity pylons destroyed across Balochistan by Baloch insurgents who challenge the authority of the Pakistani state in the province.

Nawab Bugti, a 79-year-old ex-chief minister and a governor of Balochistan, was killed in a military operation ordered by the Pervez Musharraf regime. He had emerged as a leading voice in the province against the federal government on several issues, including control over the natural resources in the province. The killing of the aged Baloch leader gave birth to a new martyr, sparked an unprecedented wave of anti-Pakistan feelings and fanned the embers of an organised separatist movement in Balochistan.

Three years after the Bugti killing, seen as nothing less than an assassination, Balochistan poses what is widely seen as a near- East Pakistan-like threat to Islamabad. While Bugti continuously negotiated with the federal government on the issue of maximum provincial autonomy, his young followers now spurn dialogue and coexistence with the federation. Some are fighting for an “independent Balochistan,” with Bramdagh Bugti, a grandson of the slain Bugti, the fiercest face of the insurgency. Pakistan accuses India of backing the 28-year-old Bramdagh Bugti for his secessionist movement while allegedly operating from Afghanistan. The young commander brushes aside these “accusations” saying they are meant to discredit the indigenous Baloch struggle intended to get rid of exploitation by the Punjab-dominated federation.
Internally divided

Currently, Baloch society is internally divided between the political forces that wish to live with Pakistan and the armed groups that advocate the cause of an independent Balochistan, even if violence has to be used to achieve this. Many would trace the momentum that the separatist movement in Balochistan has today to Bugti’s killing.

With Musharraf’s exit, the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) government extended an apology to the Balochs about the past military operation and vouchsafed negotiation with all annoyed factions of the province in order to permanently end the conflict. In return, three armed Baloch groups — the Baloch Liberation Army, Baloch Republican Army (BRA) and Baloch Liberation Front — unilaterally announced a ceasefire in September 2008.

Nonetheless, they demanded withdrawal of security forces from Balochistan, release of hundreds of political workers and ‘missing persons’ and an end to the construction of military cantonments in Balochistan as confidence building measure (CBM) from the government side.

The PPP government failed to reverse the polices of Musharraf as the state agencies continued to whisk away dozens of political workers from the pro-independent Balochistan parties such as the Baloch Republican Party (BRP) and the Baloch Students’ Organisation (BSO).
Defining moment

However, the defining moment in the shattering of the Baloch-PPP relationship came in April this year, with the abduction and subsequent murder of three important Baloch leaders with a massive following, including Ghulam Mohammad Baloch, chairman of the Baloch National Movement (BNM).

Eyewitnesses said they saw personnel of the federal paramilitary Frontier Corps storm a legal chamber and whisk away the Baloch leaders whose decomposed dead bodies showed up a few days later. A judicial committee was appointed to investigate their killings but its findings have not been made public yet.

The killings of Baloch leaders led to an intensified campaign of target killing by Baloch insurgents against Punjabi settlers in the province, mainly of school teachers and government servants. Baloch militants warned that no school across Balochistan should hoist the Pakistani flag or play the national anthem. The threat was taken seriously only after half of a dozen Punjabi principals and teachers were murdered in broad daylight.

Baloch activists burned Pakistani flags and hoisted the flag of an independent Balochistan on major educational institutions, including at the University of Balochistan. The underground Baloch groups have threatened to kill anyone who removes these Baloch flags or resumes singing the Pakistani anthem at schools. Now even elite grammar schools in Quetta have stopped playing Pakistan’s anthem.

All this has engendered an atmosphere of fear. The Balochistan Residential College in Khuzdar district, for instance, has been shut for more than two months since the killing of its principal. When the issue was raised at Balochistan Assembly, the Education Minister expressed “utter helplessness.”

“Now that the killings have already started, we can not simply describe it as a ‘threat’ only. It is a reality that our teachers are facing and being killed. The government should take notice of this dire situation before the teachers give up their jobs because of fear,” was his only response.

A considerable number of teachers in Balochistan are Punjabis, and most of them have applied with the Education Department for their transfer outside Balochistan for security reasons. The Education Ministry says the number of such applications is too high to be entertained.

The Hindu : Opinion / News Analysis : Balochistan situation getting bleaker by the day


(The writer is Balochistan bureau chief of Daily Times: maliksiraj @dailytimes.com.pk)
 
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Interesting how Malik Siraj's commentary paints a far bleaker picture than Shaukat Qadir's (first post).

However, Shaukat Qadir's analysis is based on personal experiences, observations and interviews with various strata of Baluch society, whereas Malik Siraj's commentary seem more of an indirect one largely based on indirect sources.

In fact, Shaukat Qadir addresses in passing the overwhelming focus on negative reporting related to Baluchistan in the media.
 
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No discussion of Baloch would be complete without drawing a parallel to Kashmir by Indian Members. But One must agree that there are similarities when you get down to the nitty gritties of Flag burning/hoisting and threat/murder of Govt Servants etc etc. What is your call on this!? Setting aside nationalism, Do you really think that the Central Govt in Pakistan is not doing enough for this province? I would equate this more to the Naxal belt in India rather than Kashmir though.
 
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No discussion of Baloch would be complete without drawing a parallel to Kashmir by Indian Members. But One must agree that there are similarities when you get down to the nitty gritties of Flag burning/hoisting and threat/murder of Govt Servants etc etc. What is your call on this!? Setting aside nationalism, Do you really think that the Central Govt in Pakistan is not doing enough for this province? I would equate this more to the Naxal belt in India rather than Kashmir though.

Read the first article he mentioned about those bunch of criminals, who are using baluchi nationalism for this purpose.. But when it comes to majority vs minority then things are quite different then kashmir (especially Kashmir Valley)
 
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keeping empty nationalism aside, check the other article, its from the same "Daily times" where the author rubbishes Indian involvement.
 
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keeping empty nationalism aside, check the other article, its from the same "Daily times" where the author rubbishes Indian involvement.

Please do share the photographs and media reports on vibrant enthusiasm of the IHK Kashmiris waving Indian flags and/ or singing Indian national songs on streets and schools etc.

Until that time, try not to compare apples (Baluchistan) with oranges (Kashmir) :disagree:
 
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