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Pakistan's 'secret' war in Baluchistan

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The Associated Press: Pakistan tries new counterinsurgency strategy

CHAMALANG, Pakistan — With every bag of coal Madad Khan dumps into trucks at this mine reopened with the army's help, Pakistan hopes it is moving closer to quelling a 60-year-old nationalist insurgency in this restive southwest province where Afghan Taliban leaders are rumored to hide.

Echoing U.S. counterinsurgency strategy in neighboring Afghanistan, the army has peppered Baluchistan with dozens of development projects to win hearts and minds, an effort officials say has accelerated in recent months alongside a push by the federal government to address local grievances.

Pakistan hopes to replicate this counterinsurgency strategy in other areas along the Afghan border where the army is battling a separate rebellion led by the Pakistani Taliban. But like the U.S. effort in Afghanistan, many observers are skeptical Pakistan's recent push in Baluchistan will succeed given the deep distrust of the state and security forces.

"They are unable to pacify the people because the political and economic alienation of the local population is huge," said Riffat Hussain, professor of defense studies at Quaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad.

Baluchistan remains Pakistan's poorest province despite the presence of vast natural resources that residents complain are mainly exploited to fill the central government's coffers. They also chafe under what they view as effective military rule.

"The government has moved in the right direction, but the province is still virtually under the control of the paramilitary forces and particularly the army," said Hussain.

Baluchistan's geopolitical importance has grown in recent years with China's construction of a huge port on the coast connecting Asia and the Middle East and a planned gas pipeline linking Pakistan and Iran. Many also believe Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar is hiding in Baluchistan, benefiting from instability in the province, which borders southern Afghanistan.

Pakistan has launched at least five separate military operations in Baluchistan, the most recent under former President Pervez Musharraf that killed one of the province's top tribal leaders. The army pulled back to its barracks at the beginning of 2008, but federal paramilitary forces are still deployed throughout the province.

The provincial government has accused those forces and federal intelligence agencies of secretly snatching nearly a thousand people off the street and holding them for years without admitting it, a problem that residents and human rights groups say continues to occur.

"A history of neglect and betrayal over the decades coupled with systematic human rights abuses carried out with impunity has made a vast number of Baluch people desperate," said the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan in a report late last year.

Insurgents have responded with a wave of assassinations against non-Baluch residents that have killed hundreds of people, many of them doctors and teachers from other parts of Pakistan.

The army has denied any involvement in the forced disappearance of people and has tried to improve its image in Baluchistan by spending more than $7 million in a development drive that first started in 2007 and has accelerated in recent months. Officials say they realize the conflict cannot be solved by force alone.

"We have learned from the past, and now there is a great realization that unless you go and touch the people's lives, it's not really going to be sustainable," said army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas during a recent visit to Baluchistan.

One of the army's first big development efforts was a deal brokered between two warring tribes to reopen the Chamalang coal mine, which had been shuttered for more than 30 years. The mine, which taps into one of Asia's largest coal fields, reopened in March 2007 and has produced more than $70 million worth of coal and employs about 70,000 people.

"The army has definitely improved its image with this mine," said Khan, the 25-year-old coal worker who earns five times more money at the mine than he did working as a farm laborer in the provincial capital, Quetta.

Proceeds from the mine, which are split between the federal and provincial governments, are used to fund an army-run program that has paid for the education of more than 4,000 Baluchi students.

The army has also built or reconstructed more than a hundred schools, health clinics and mosques, provided about 1,000 Baluchi men and women with vocational training, and stepped up local recruiting into both the army and police.

Once there is sufficient security, the army hopes to undertake similar efforts in the country's semiautonomous tribal region along the Afghan border where it has launched several offensives against Taliban militants. The rugged tribal areas are even less developed than Baluchistan and there is a similar distrust of the state.

The federal government also has stepped up efforts to improve the Baluchistan situation in recent months. It has raised Baluchistan's share of federal tax revenue, passed a constitutional amendment to increase provincial autonomy, and approved a package of reforms aimed at addressing local grievances, including the status of missing people and the share of natural resource wealth.

But Baluchi nationalists have dismissed the measures as mere political promises that have little chance of being honored.

"For me, the Baluchistan package is nothing but a political gimmick," said Tahir Bizenjo, the head of one of the province's largest nationalist parties. "As far as these army development projects are concerned, you also have Baluchistan suffering the greatest human rights violations."

Hussain, the defense studies professor, said the army's projects are too small in scale to have a significant impact on the population of more than 7 million and are located outside areas where grievances and related instability are the highest — a problem the U.S. has grappled with in Afghanistan.

He said if the Pakistani government really wants to resolve the Baluchistan issue, it needs to follow through on its reform promises and begin a political dialogue with the insurgents that addresses human rights violations by the security services.

"These are very serious allegations and unless you address them in a credible fashion and bring the perpetrators of these atrocities to justice, you will continue to have a credibility problem," said Hussain.
 
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July 9, 2010...1:02 pm
Balochistan – time to wake up
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Salman Latif

If today I endeavored to draw a parallel between East Pakistan and modern-day Balochistan, I’m sure it’d be a well-founded one. With the way the central governments have been playing denial to the rightful plights of the Baluchis and continue to do so, it’s not too difficult to discern how similar the situation is to the one on East Pakistan. Whereas all ‘disturbances’ and revolts are attributed to ‘foreign’ hands, the center never ventures to ponder as to what makes Baluchistan a hotbed for such anarchy. A very fleeting look instantly reveals that it has been an acute state of injustice, provincial inequality and continous military repression that has pushed Pakistan’s largest province to the brink of rebellion. Extenstive military establishments throughout the region only affirm the notion that Federation has been using force and coercion rather than incentive and reform to contain local agitation.

The Balochistan issue dates back exactly to the days of Pakistan’s indepedence. For long, the ‘Iron Curtain’ extended by Islamabad over the region prevented the availability of first-hand narratives of the Balochis and their side of the story. All that the masses were ever told by the state machinery was that there was some turmoil in the province and that army had to intervene, times and again, to ‘save’ the people there. However, with an increasing surge of independent media channels, there is now at least an understanding of the fact that something unusual is up with Balochistan. Although such media outlets are still non-existent in Balochistan itself, where an attempt to establish a channel or newspaper often leads to arrest or alleged abduction by intelligence agencies, the Balochis’ plight is slowly being brought forth in limited media circles. And that is indeed a welcome sign.

A brief history of the issue:
On August 12, 1947, New York Times published the following piece of news: “An announcement from New Delhi said that Kalat, Moslem State in Baluchistan, had reached an agreement with Pakistan for free flow of communications and commerce, and would negotiate for decisions on defense, external affairs and communications. Under the agreement, Pakistan recognizes Kalat as an independent sovereign state with a status different from that of Indian States.”

So was the state of affairs at the time of Pakistan’s independence. However, not too later, Khan of Kalat was asked to formally accede to Pakistan. Khan retaliated, stating that his state had been granted autonomy under the agreement. A Parliament of the local tribal heads and chieftains unanimously resounded the same sentiment. However, Mr. Jinnah, formerly Khan’s legal aide, was not to hear a ‘no’ and after having pressurized the Khan to sign the Instrument of Accession(as Khan noted later in his autobiography), army took control of the province, jailing him and dismembering his cabinet. Khan’s brother took to mountains, refusing to accept the decision and choosing to retaliate the army’s invastion. That marked the first armed retaliation against the central government.

Since the accession, four more popular armed uprisings have occured in the province, most of them dealt with by army and crushed cruelly. Despite the fact that Balochistan opted for autonomy at the time of independence, the Balochis today ask for their rights more so than the separation from Pakistan. And they would certainly have agreed to adopt the constitutional way had it yielded any results in the past. However, all parliamentary efforts from their end have proved futile and they remain highly disenchanted by the constitutional methods.

Provincial Inequality:
Baluchistan is Pakistan’s largest province comprising approximately 43% of the total land area and supporting a population of about 7 million people. It is rich in a number of valuable minerals including vast copper and natural gas deposits. However, the sad fact is that while the entire country benefits from these resources, Balochis themselves are handed a meagre royalty for them and nothing else. A case study shall expound my point. Natural gas deposits were discovered in Balochistan in 1953. Household and commercial gas was supplied to Punjab from this source since as far back as 1964. But royalties were offered to Quetta only in 1980(the amount of this paid royalty is constant ever since) and it was connected with a gas supply in 1986. And today, as even Sindh’s remote areas enjoy the facility, out of Balochistan’s 26 districts, only 4 are supplied with gas.

It is this provincial inequality that has fiercely triggered the sense of deprivation among Balochi masses. Even the provincial governments have been severely inhibited in their efforts to improve conditions because of the fact that Islamabad takes direct decisions over policies governing the province. In the past, a number of nationalist leaders have been elected to the parliament. Nawab Akbar Bugti had served both as the Governor and the Chief Minister of the province. Ataullah Mengal and Akhtar Mengal also lead the provincial government in the capacity of being Chief Ministers. Nonetheless, all these unromantic partenerships with the center ended abruptly with the center wielding it’s power by disregarding these nationalist office-holders and their reservations. To cite an instance, Nawab Akbar Bugto resigned after his disagreements with the Federal Government at the latter’s decision to launch a military operation in Balochistan. Similarly, the nuclear experiments at Chaghai were carried out without any consultation with the Chief Minister or the provincial cabinet. The people in the region continue to suffer severe health problems because of the after-effects of those experiments with no compensation from the Government of Pakistan.

These experiments have hugely disenchanted the local masses of the significance of constitutional furthering of their plights. An increasing number of them, especially the youth, view military response as the only viable solution. However, the mainstream nationalist leaders are still ready to engage in dialogue only if they’re assured that the terms agreed upon at the occasion of accession shall be honored. These include much more provincial autonomy and provincial say in regional affairs.

Terrorism and Counter-terrorism – who’s who and what’s what?
Army has become an integral part of the Balochistan equation since the very start. It has gradually moved from a partial, distant control of the region to a more organized control, replacing the Levies forces and bringing a very large part under it’s reign. In local culture, it has become synonymous with extra-judicial abductions, killings and missing persons. According to UN reports, about 8000 Balochis have gone missing since 2005. And that’s a very small part of the larger picture. Army has been increasingly deployed by the center to extend a firm grip and bring the local dissidents into the fold of central command. Naturally, this has resulted in a very hostile reaction from Balochis who view army garrisons as a sign of enroachment on their nationalism. To them, all army activities in the region are a version of state terrorism.

Federation, on the other hand, is extremely sensitive towards Baloch national sentiments and it’s definition of terrorism terms everyone with a separatist agenda as a terrorist. Such sweeping generalizations have lead to the arrests and abductions of thousands, the whereabouts of many of which stay unknown after years. Center is of the opinion that if it fails to address these anti-national and separatist outbursts, it’s grip on the province will weaken.

When talking of terrorism in Balochistan, Balochistan Liberation Army is not a name to be missed. BLA has been increasingly active in recent years. And increasingly violent too, killing scores of Punjabis or anyone having the slightest to do with Punjab. According to the political activists in the region, BLA enjoys mass support and the sole reason this support is extended is because they fight. BLA is said to comprise educated, young Balochis, many of them engineers, doctors, lawyers, barristers and other highly qualified personnel. Evidently, the democratic franchise has so weakened in the province that people consider an armed struggle as the only viable solution. Needless to state this has put the lives of thousands of immigrants in Balochistan in jeopardy.

Plight of the Baluchis:
Balochis have a set of traditions and norms that strike one as unique at the very first look. Like Pashtuns, they are not a creed easily diminished or invaded. Likewise, they have never given up their struggle for an honorable existence. Ever since their forced accession, they have been denied basic rights. The region lacks health, educational and land reforms and the basic infrastructure is very underdeveloped. To top it, they have been in an unnamed subjugation to the army.

An average Balochi today asks for just one thing: basic rights. They want federal government to expend the money that’s earned through their resources in the same region. They want schools, hospitals and infrastructure development. Above everything else, they want the Center to grant provincial autonomy and stop meddling with local politics. Unlike most of Pakistan’s other region, Balochistan is still safe from the plague of extremism. And contrary to the popular media-made perceptions, Balochis are an enlightened lot. The nationalist leaders, including Khan of Kalat and Ataullah Mengal, agree upon the establishment of a modern, secular democracy should Balochistan be awarded provincial autonomy. This is also the view of an average Balochi today who has put aside his tribal prejudice to purse this common cause.

At the start of this article, I strove to establish a parallel between 1971′s East Pakistan and today’s Balochistan. And I still hold that the two have striking resemblances. Back in 1971, Federal Government kept playing blind to the horrendous discrimination committed towards East Pakistan. And when the eventual backlash started, no self-chastenings would work. If India or other ‘foreign’ hands were able to exploit the situation, it was because the situation was volatile enough already. Bengalis had been neglected for decades and when the army started its saga of atrocities against them, their choice became obvious – separation. Balochistan today seems to move towards a similar destiny. However, with the fragmented resistance put up by Baluchis, it’s a long way before they can claim power enough for a successful armed struggle.

Meanwhile, the Center and the Army has time enough to ponder over their utterly flawed policies, policies which have only worsened the situation over the last 63 years and solved nothing. President Zardari’s government did declare a Balochistan package but like all it’s past counterparts, it’s been mere words and no actions thus far. These policies and the proposed reforms must be implemented without any delay and before the breaking point is reached, we must find a common ground where both Federation and Balochistan can guard it’s interests without fringing upon each other’s rights. If this is not done, and the chances seem thin with the Federation’s total lack of interest in addressing the Balochis’ plight, I fear that we may have to face another 1971.


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Balochistan – time to wake up Pak Tea House
 
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solve the problems in Baluchistan! Crush the feudal landlords/nawabs/sardars, and end government inefficiency and corruption, and enforce a strong tax collection rate --- and almost ALL the remaining problems are solved --- from there on its mostly social development such as state health care, improved education system and proper family planning --though that would apply more to Punjab than to Baluchistan where population is relatively low.

It really should NOT be so hard to solve the political problems there. Much of it lies in feudalism, corruption, poor law and order, and a failure of federal government to take initiative and invest in local infrastructure and schools


Once again, it is up to my Baluch Pakistani brothers/sisters to reject the feudal nature and embrace national approach. The only reason "Pushtoons and Punjabis" go there for technical jobs is because the illiteracy rate is appalling in Baluchistan. It makes a hell of a lot more sense for fed to invest a hell of a lot of money to equip the locals, instead of complaining about lack of skilled local labour.

When Baluchistan sees benefits from investment in their resources (and the royalties that would follow from resources and Gwadar transit fees) then they will be more empowered and less reliant on feudal nawabs -who have ties to bandits and drug lords in Iranian and Pakistani Baluchestan.


why is it so hard for people to understand this?



why why why?????



we cannot let ''nationalists'' and foreign agents undermine safety and sanity there....why are some of the student hostels there having weapons inside? Where the hell is the police and police intelligence? Army should not be there to be traffic wardens and police officers!!

That is very true,
no one has suffered more from feudalism then the Baloch people.

It is just a matter of realization by the people of Balochistan where exactly is the problem.

If they were to be made aware of the lavish life styles of the so called feudal "NAWAB" they would rise up and revolt;
and by the way I feel the same about the rest of Pakistan and Pakistani people.

I would even go as far and say that if the revolution has to begin,
it would most possibly be led by the Baloch people.
 
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never knew Balochistan was an independent country before.
 
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Its sad to see the conditions that the Balochis are in, it shouldn't be surprising that they are demanding independence!:disagree:
 
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never knew Balochistan was an independent country before.
All the states were independent in some era...........If you know the history....if we go by this logic then we'll be dividen into 4 and you into 34.
 
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An average Balochi today asks for just one thing: basic rights. They want federal government to expend the money that’s earned through their resources in the same region. They want schools, hospitals and infrastructure development. Above everything else, they want the Center to grant provincial autonomy and stop meddling with local politics.
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Balochistan – time to wake up Pak Tea House

how hard could it be to provide them their basic rights? I never knew the situation was this bad, BLA has a reason behind it, it didn't just pop out of nowhere!
 
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how hard could it be to provide them their basic rights? I never knew the situation was this bad, BLA has a reason behind it, it didn't just pop out of nowhere!
But i don't know how come it poped out with so many weapons after the so called humanitarian mission of our neighbour in Afghanistan....They didn't had any russian made rockets or recoiless rifles before.
 
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But i don't know how come it poped out with so many weapons after the so called humanitarian mission of our neighbour in Afghanistan....They didn't had any russian made rockets or recoiless rifles before.

yes, i know that india and other anti Pakistan elements are providing the BLA with weapons, but you have to understand that had the Baluchis been provided with their basic rights and had they not been mistreated then today india wouldn't have had the chance to support violent insurgencies in Pakistan and neither would BLA have existed!

It does hurt me to know that Baluchis want independence from Pakistan but its also painful to know how they are mistreated and don't even have basic human rights!
 
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those with ulterior objectives are doing targetted killing of teachers; just yesterday armed assasins waged war on Pakistan (not just Baluchistan) by targetting BNP chief.

They are targetting professors....they attack oil installations.


every single grievance that exist -- those are GENUINE concerns. Our leaders are too stupid and incompetent to heed to them. Baluchistan should easily be the wealthiest and most prosperous province in the country, if the right policies are enacted and there is brave leadership


but there is more to it that meets the eye. The feudal system existing there is as responsible for keeping the people down-trodden. The nawabs dont want the youth to be educated, or to join the police or armed forces...

why?


because then they lose their influence and power......it really is not difficult to see or fathom


the ''system'' needs to be changed in a way that suits the people of Baluchistan province.
 
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They want federal government to expend the money that’s earned through their resources in the same region. They want schools, hospitals and infrastructure development. Above everything else, they want the Center to grant provincial autonomy and stop meddling with local politics.
how hard could it be to provide them their basic rights? I never knew the situation was this bad, BLA has a reason behind it, it didn't just pop out of nowhere!
And is the government delivering all those things (schools, hospitals and infrastructure) in every other province? Complaints about the lack of investment by the Federal and Provincial governments and endemic corruption and ineptitude exist in every province, not just Balochistan.

Explain to me why the Pakistan Army soldiers are giving up a days worth of pay to construct clinics, schools and roads in Baluchistan? What is the Baluch provincial government doing, what is the Federal government doing?

With respect to the arguments about autonomy and more equitable distribution of resources, these have been handled to a large degree with the 18th amendment and the latest NFC award. The Balochistan government representatives expressed satisfaction with their share of resources under the new award (backwardness and poverty are now part of the equation used for calculating how much each province gets). In addition, revenue from the exploitation of natural resources in the various provinces will now be divided 50-50 between the province and the Center.

The point here being that through dialog and consultation, issues are being addressed.
 
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14 July 2010 Last updated at 11:37 GMT
BBC


Gunmen shoot dead former senator in Balochistan
 
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And is the government delivering all those things (schools, hospitals and infrastructure) in every other province? Complaints about the lack of investment by the Federal and Provincial governments and endemic corruption and ineptitude exist in every province, not just Balochistan.

Explain to me why the Pakistan Army soldiers are giving up a days worth of pay to construct clinics, schools and roads in Baluchistan? What is the Baluch provincial government doing, what is the Federal government doing?

With respect to the arguments about autonomy and more equitable distribution of resources, these have been handled to a large degree with the 18th amendment and the latest NFC award. The Balochistan government representatives expressed satisfaction with their share of resources under the new award (backwardness and poverty are now part of the equation used for calculating how much each province gets). In addition, revenue from the exploitation of natural resources in the various provinces will now be divided 50-50 between the province and the Center.

The point here being that through dialog and consultation, issues are being addressed.

i think that ONE good thing about the PPP is that they seem to have a relatively good ''working relationship'' with the Chief Minister of the province.....

As for Army -- they have done phenomenal role thanks to capable leadership and sacrifices. For that, they must be commended.
 
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