Friday, January 31, 2014

Inside Balochistan With Willem Marx


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Inside Balochistan With Willem Marx

Balochistan!
Signed copies of Balochistan at a Crossroads, by Willem Marx and Marc Wattrelot, are available directly from the authors via Paypal. You can get plain old unsigned ones via Amazon in the U.S.
"I was supposed to fly to Afghanistan today but my body armor didn't arrive in time," was something Willem Marx said to me one of the first times we met. He says things like this on a not infrequent basis. Marx currently works at Bloomberg TV and has reported from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uzbekistan, the Arctic Circle, and other less trodden parts of the world.
In 2009, he spent time in Pakistan, where he met French photographer Marc Wattrelot. "Balochistan at a Crossroads" is the result of a collaboration between the pair, an unusual coffee table book that focuses on a province in the country whose people are locked in a slow, long-simmering fight for freedom. "It's a travelogue with some history and reportage," said Marx, who is donating the publisher's check to Unicef in the region to help with the efforts to eradicate Polio. "Hopefully, it will give you a sense of a place that realistically, very few of the readers will ever get to visit in the near future." Body armor optional. We had some questions for him.
Where the heck is this place?
It's an area that's divided up between Pakistan and Iran. You have a province in Pakistan called Balochistan and you have a province in Iran called Sistan-va-Baluchestan. The people from the region are called the Baloch, hence the name of the area. They are a bit like the Kurds in the sense that they were carved up by imperial powers. Consequently, they've never really been able to establish their own national identity. If you asked the Baloch in Pakistan, they will say they were an independent state before the British arrived, the British recognized their sovereignty, and then after partition they were tricked by the Pakistanis into becoming part of Pakistan.
So the British are the good guys?
I wouldn't say that. I would say that in this mythical view that many people have, the Baluch got screwed by Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan.
How did you end up there?
I lived in Karachi as a kid, which is just outside the province of Balochistan, but I had never really paid any attention to this name I had seen a bunch of times—until 2005. There was a tribal conflict that was flaring up there. I had just graduated college and was in Baghdad. I read this fascinating BBC News story online about how these people were fighting against the Pakistani army with very little in terms of support and very little in terms of artillery.
CIA map of "major ethnic groups" of Pakistan from 1980.
CIA map of "major ethnic groups" of Pakistan from 1980.
Does everyone in Pakistan know about this conflict?
It's like the hidden secret. I cannot get a single person to sell this book. It's quite bizarre. It's not because the booksellers don't want to sell it. They are worried that they will have their premises investigated. No wholesaler will import it. It's really extraordinary. It's a secret conflict that's been going on since the 1940s, the latest iteration since 2005. That's eight years of low-intensity conflict, but you hear very little about it. Maybe there's something in the Pakistani press, but it's very difficult as a journalist to get to the region.
I had gone there as a TV journalist and shot some stories there, but I had so much material that wasn't used in the packages I put together. Marc had hundreds of photographs, and we thought we should do something because it's so hard to get there.
Do you have any sense of whether they can break away?
They'd love to but I don't think they are sufficiently well organized and funded. Their template is Bangladesh. At the end of British rule of the subcontinent, Pakistan became two separate nations. Pakistan was split into two very distinct geographical areas, into east and west. East Pakistan was dominated by ethnic Bengalis who won freedom in the early 1970s. That became the nation of Bangladesh. A lot of Baloch will say we want the same kind of thing. But Pakistan is very sensitive of this because it was very humiliating internationally when it lost a large part of its country and population. They were different and so separated. The Baloch are ethnically different to the Punjabis, the Pathans, and the Sindhis. The nationalist Baloch are very hostile to the Punjabis, who have tended to be the elite since partition, but they do have a big contiguous border, so it would be a little more complicated deciding how to demarcate things. I think that unless they get international support, it's not going to happen anytime soon.
Did you feel in danger when you were traveling there?
It's a pretty wild place. There's a lot of banditry. Being a foreigner makes you a bit of a target. The biggest problem is the Pakistani military. Civilian rule doesn't count for a great deal outside of the provincial capital, Quetta. The soldiers and the intelligence officers tend to be in charge when it comes to security.
Conversely, when I spent time with the militants who are fighting against them, I always felt that they looked after me incredibly well. They obviously wanted the publicity, so it was in their interest to make sure that I was looked after and safe. But it really felt like going back in time. You have these mountain camps where the rebels live in these very austere environments. It's incredibly hot during the summer and incredibly cold during the winter. They have a degree of local support so they were able to access food and fuel supplies in the villages. There were entire areas that I traveled to in the province that were under their control. The military had pulled back and left entire valley and mountainous areas up to the rebel.
CIA political map of Pakistan from 2002.
CIA political map of Pakistan from 2002.
What's the most scared you were?
I went to meet an Iranian Baloch leader on the Pakistani border. The Baloch in Iran are a Sunni population in a majority Shite country, so they are treated both as an ethnic and a religious minority. If you ask the Iranian Baloch, they will say they are trampled upon repeatedly and they are treated as second-class citizens in their own province. I went to visit this militant who the Iranians considered their most wanted terrorist at the time and repeatedly claimed that he was being funded by the Americans, specifically the CIA. He was a very charming, engaging young guy. We were both around 24 or 25.
Going to meet him was really, really scary. I wasn't allowed to bring my own translator. I wasn't allowed to bring the guy who had been driving me around the province. I had to take on faith that these guys weren't going to do any harm. Their ideology leaned pretty heavily Islamist. The Iranians said they were like al-Qaeda. There were certainly videos of them beheading captives like the Iranian Revolutionary Guard and the Iranian border police. I had to get in a car with a bunch of these guys and hope they weren't going to do any harm.
Spending time with them on the Iranian boarder was really scary. They were constantly being hunted by the Iranian authorities. It was unclear to me whether I was in Iran or Pakistan at the time. The idea of being in Iran, illegally, without a visa, as a journalist, with a bunch of people who they considered terrorists was pretty unnerving. I tried to limit my time spent with them.
There's been a lot of talk about the difficulty of freelancing as a foreign correspondent. You were doing this piece for Dan Rather Reports, but it was your first story for them and you weren't on staff. That's not a whole lot of security.
In hindsight, I probably wouldn't pursue this story without better guarantees. Subsequently, having worked at places like CBS that have a great deal more resources and support and training…. Essentially, I had no idea what I was doing. I knew how to film. I knew how to put a story together. But if things had gone wrong, it was me in the middle of nowhere on a satellite phone calling people in New York who themselves had no idea where I was. Getting into a car with a bunch of young, Iranian Baloch militants and saying goodbye to the driver and translator who were the only two people I knew within 1,000 miles was a pretty stupid thing to do. But it ended up making me into someone who the TV show in particular wanted to keep around. I worked for them for several years. But in hindsight—I don't want to say it was a stupid thing to do, but certainly a risky thing to do.
I've thought about that a lot in the subsequent years. It's one of the difficult things in this line of work. To get attention as a young person, you have to almost go and do stories that other people don't want to do and put yourself in harm's way. Now, at age 31, I would a) ask for a lot more money and b) want to know that there were better safeguards. For me, this was a fascinating story and an incredible place to be able to visit and the opportunity was the one that I seized but in hindsight, very risky.
How did you prepare for the trip to Balochistan? You're basically just parachuting into a place and trying to figure it out quickly.
Well, I was never going to fit in even though I did grow a pathetic attempt at a beard. That said, I spent what was essentially a month reading everything I could get my hands on and speaking to as many people as possible. If every story I ever did could be one in which I could do that, I would be very happy. I was very well prepared in terms of my background knowledge. I didn't know what to expect physically when I arrived there but I knew what was going on.
That's one of the amazing things about our generation's access to information. You can turn up in a place completely alien to you, but because of the Internet you can have read hundreds of thousands of local news accounts that give you a sense of what's going on there. If you went back to a previous generation of foreign correspondents, that wasn't possible. You could make as many phone calls as you wanted but it wouldn't give you quite as much depth and context as you now have access to.
It's like we've traded individual institutional knowledge for a collective knowledge or something like that.
Yeah, and since then, it's changed even more. Using things like Twitter and Facebook, I could have set up half my interviews in advance. Instead, I relied a network of underground activists. I managed to get permission to travel around Balochistan by explaining that I wanted to do economic reporting in this very economically marginalized province. At the time, President Zardari was talking a big game about what he was able to do about economic improvement in the Balochistan province. Somewhere, I think that struck a chord and they thought it was a good idea. I had the name Dan Rather behind me, and Pakistani press officials knew who he was. So that helped. I don't think they suspected I'd be doing stories about the Baloch Liberation Army. That might be more difficult now.

Great teacher.

I love my teacher

M. A. Talpur on Balochistan: “When crimes become invisible”

Wife of Baz Mohammad Marri stands by the graves of her two sons Mohammad Khan and Mohammad Nabi killed on same day on May 27th 2012 after being abducted by security forces in Quetta. 
“When crimes become invisible”

By Mir Mohammad Ali Talpur

A mass grave was discovered in Tootak, Khuzdar on the 25th January by a shepherd after which the locals converged there to recover bodies. The number of the bodies found, which the middle class government representatives are at pains to limit to 13, while reports filtering out put the number at around 150 and more. Even a Supreme Court (SC) judge said the number is 25. 

The numbers aside what this supposedly representative government fails to understand is that even a single body is one too many but then this government like that of the previous one is more concerned about surviving rather than serving the people.


According to Gregory H. Stanton, the President of Genocide Watch, genocide consists of eight stages which are Classification, Symbolization, Dehumanization, Organization, Polarization, Preparation, Extermination and Denial. 

This process in Balochistan may not have been as blatant as that of the Nazi Germany or as it was overt in Rwanda but it is subtly in progress with lot of political trappings to cover it up. Two genocidal processes are going on simultaneously in Balochistan one which targets Baloch and the other which targets Hazaras and Shia. 

The Baloch are systematically being marginalized to make their suppression easier and the illegal exploitation of their resources justifiable. The Hazaras, as my friend Dr. Mohammad Taqi Sahib in his piece, ‘Balochistan bleeding’ (Daily Times 30thJanuary) has rightly said are being ‘ghettoized’. 

The threat of use of force is ghettoizing them while Baloch being the majority cannot be physically ghettoized in the same manner are being politically and economically ghettoized by Pakistan so that eventually they can be physically ghettoized. Instrumental in this process is the Dr. Malik government in the same manner that Raisani government was before it and their mentor and master the army and Frontier Corps (FC). 

The use of force against Baloch is also being systematically and ruthlessly employed and the proof of it is the thousands missing and more than eight hundred of them killed and dumped apart from the fake encounter killings which also are of the same magnitude. This is being done to terrorize the Baloch population into submission and acceptance of their relegation to second class subjects of state who would then have to acquiesce to whatever is meted out to them and whatever political and material crumbs are thrown their way. 

The Baloch have not meekly accepted this as their destiny and inevitable fate. They have resisted it tooth and nail since 27th March 1948 and this has been their salvation and helped them maintain their Baloch identity and also thwarted the complete domination that Pakistan desires and strives for. Had not the Baloch resisted force with force Balochistan would have been swamped by other ethnic groups and monopolized and owned by multi-nations and Gulf state rulers. 

The Baloch have paid a heavy price to maintain their identity and dignity and the mass graves of Tootak, which certainly are few of the many that exist, and all the missing and killed are a proof of and reminder of that. The Baloch haven’t hesitated to pay the price which history exacts of those who want to live with dignity and pride. 

Nearly two hundred thousand Bugtis were displaced from Dera Bugti and adjoining areas in 2005 when the army under Musharraf unleashed a vicious operation against them to ensure that they would be obeyed unquestioningly and resulted in death of Nawab Akbar Bugti in 2006. 

The impact of this exodus of such a large number of Bugtis can be understood when we realize that this number amounts to an overwhelming majority of Bugtis living in their ancestral lands. These Bugtis who like any other people anywhere in world would like to live in the place they know and is theirs but they have been kept away from their ancestral lands because their loyalty is suspect in eyes of army and FC whose writ is ultimate there. 

Shahzain Bugti, a grandson of Nawab Akbar Bugti, always at pains to prove his loyalty to Pakistan was promised passage to Dera Bugti with many of the long displaced Bugtis on orders of SC and assurances of the puppets in Quetta but they were denied entry by the FC which wants certain conditions of assurances of loyalty to be met before they would allow anyone to return. 

The displaced Bugtis are being denied their inalienable right to live in their ancestral land by force and this injustice doesn’t even stir those who claim to be nationalists and are the government there. Dr. Malik and his government, if this cringing, groveling and pathetic band of persons can be given this respectable designation of government, are so indebted to their mentors-the army and FC- that they cannot utter a word which may jeopardize their lucrative positions. 

To return back to the mass graves of Tootak one has to mention the gems which the Sarfaraz Bugti who holds the mock title of interior minister in Balochistan. In an interview to BBC Urdu while denying involvement of his mentors in this horrendous crime tried to shift on the blame to RAW and Baloch Sarmachars. He forgot that the very pusillanimous SC, which in spite of a hundred hearings on the issue of missing persons has not been even able to charge let alone prosecute a single person for the missing or killed, has quite candidly blamed FC and intelligence agencies for the missing persons and the ‘kill and dump’ policy. 

But Dr. Malik and his pathetic band can see no evil, hear no evil and speak no evil of those they are indebted to for what they are and where they are today. Even a hundred mass graves, there may be even more, are going to move them or prick their conscience enough to at least speak the truth if not resign. 

The Voice of Baloch Missing Persons’ Long March led by the redoubtable Mama Qadeer with his equally intrepid Banuks (ladies in Balochi) and Warnas (young men in Balochi) has become even more poignant and momentous with the discovery of the mass graves. 

The participants’ resolve is strengthened even more with this gruesome discovery. Their march is an entirely new chapter of Baloch struggle for their rights and the injustices against them. They have earned the thanks and love of Baloch nation the hard way. These brave souls deserve unreserved thanks and gratitude of the Baloch Nation. One can only stand in awe in front of these dedicated Baloch who have set new bench marks of not only patience and endurance but also of innovation of political struggle. 

They protested against the mass graves at Multan Press Club on Thursday to highlight the issue of the atrocities and ‘dirty war’ that is being waged against the Baloch. Their protest is unique and has made millions of people aware of the injustices. A million speeches and articles could have achieved what their historic march has. 

They have so far walked nearly 1700 kilometres and are still 730 kms away from Islamabad. The injustices against Baloch do not seem to register in minds of people and Pakistani media. They are listless and apathetic towards the crimes against humanity being perpetrated against Baloch and of late against Hazaras. Could this apathy be because of what as Bertolt Brecht says that, ‘When crimes begin to pile up they become invisible.” 

Most likely people become inured to injustices against others especially if the persecuted are stigmatized for religion as Hazaras are or for political aims as the Baloch are. To further show the apathy and the reason I will end my piece with Bertolt Brecht’s quote from his Selected Poems:

“The first time it was reported that our friends were being butchered there was a cry of horror. 
Then a hundred were butchered. But when a thousand were butchered and there was no end to the butchery, a blanket of silence spread. When evil-doing comes like falling rain, nobody calls out "stop!" 

When crimes begin to pile up they become invisible. When sufferings become unendurable the cries are no longer heard. The cries, too, fall like rain in summer.”

35 years old Uram s/o Bahiyaan and his 15 years old brother Nasir both brother abducted by Pakistani forces on 4th of october on 2013 from Awaran .

35 years old Uram s/o Bahiyaan and his 15 years old brother Nasir both brother abducted by Pakistani forces on 4th of october on 2013 from Awaran R/O Peerandar Ziyarat e Dann. Bodies found out from the mass graves in Tootak Khuzdar, identified by their NIC card.

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Gohmert Speaks on Mass Graves in Balochistan, Pakistan.


Pakistan's march to theocracy .

There are growing concerns that the country was fast moving toward a theocratic order.

 
It was a quick call from my editor's office in Karachi informing me not to bother writing anymore about the Tehreek Taliban Pakistan (TTP) or any other militant outfit, religious party or even the cricketer-turned-politician's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI). I was told I couldn't even mention TTP and its other sister organisations. The call came in the wake of an attack on a vehicle carrying staff of a media groupwhich killed three people and injured another four. 
The TTP was quick to take responsibility. The spokesman of the militant outfit Ehsanullah Ehsan even appeared on a television program and warned the media group about giving the TTP bad press. The channel's anchor Javed Chaudhry had to promise a "balanced" representation of views about the militants and their agenda. Furthermore, Ehsan claimed the attack was an attempt to force Pakistan to meet the promise of imposing Sharia law in the country. 
A day later on January 19, another 20 Frontier Corps (FC) soldiers were killed and about 30 injured in a suicide attack in Bannu Cantonment in the northern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK). This was followed by an attack on January 20 in Rawalpindi Cantonment near the Pakistan Army's GHQ, bringing the death toll up to 33 and the number of wounded to 63. Not to mention the constant targeting of polio workersacross the country.
These attacks happen despite the civilian government's claim to engage the Taliban in a dialogue to end the violence. The first attack on the television channel came the same day as the statement by the TTP spokesman announcing his group's willingness to talk with Pakistan's government as long as the latter ensured the implementation of Sharia law in the country.
Country divided
Such statements, followed by attacks, tend to divide the country and society into two camps. While there are those who are frustrated by the government's inaction against the Taliban, others have a similar feeling but for a different reason. A number of young men and women I spoke with in urban centers of South Punjab sympathise with the TTP rather than their own soldiers. Their reason, as one young woman stated: "What's wrong with the Taliban asking for implementation of Sharia? If fighting is the only way they force the government to do what people want, then so be it."
Islamabad reacted to the attack in Bannu with an aerial bombardment of North Waziristan. This reportedlykilled a prominent Taliban commander, Adnan Rashid, a former soldier linked with the attack on Pakistan's former President General Pervez Musharraf.
But many wonder if the attack on North Waziristan - considered a sanctuary for the TTP - is enough to solve the problem. There are three issues in solving the problem of violent extremism in the country. First, there appears to be a lack of consensus on talking to the Taliban. While right-wing parties or others with a strong right-wing flavor like the PML-N and PTI support the idea of talking to the TTP, others like Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party (PPP), the ethnic Awami National Party (ANP) and the Mutahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), contest the idea.
Second, even if a consensus were reached on talking to the TTP, it is not clear what the government would negotiate. Will it agree to implement Sharia law in the country? Would Islamabad release about 4,500 imprisoned militants as per TTP demand a few months ago? Or will the government find a way to stop American drone attacks in tribal areas?
Third, if a method were found to fight the Taliban, then a larger problem would be that of not having the capacity to do so. Here, the notion of capacity does not refer exclusively to the military's physical capability but also the aggregated will of the nation to fight militancy and wipe out violent extremism from the country. The gradual strengthening of the right-wing ideology in the state and society hampers the ability to udnertake such a battle. 
The militancy problem has grown far bigger than imagined. The two main parties at the moment, which made gains in the 2013 elections - the PML-N and PTI - have militant sympathisers in their ranks at significant levels. The Punjab government is even known for paying militant madrassas from the government exchequer. The PPP and the MQM in Sindh vociferously condemn violent extremism.
Low conviction rate
However, they suffer from a shallow assessment of the issue. Skeptics also point a finger at the judiciary, which is unable to punish those convicted of terrorism. Pakistan has a very low conviction rate, which some believe is not just out of fear, but because many judges are sympathetic to extremist ideology or such groups. Although it is popularly imagined that the army opposes talks with the Taliban, some sources claim there are TTP and "jihadi" sympathisers even within the armed forces.
In Pakistan, it is fashionable to say that the American and NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan will end violence in the country and the region at large.
In Pakistan, it is fashionable to say that the American and NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan will end violence in the country and the region at large.
However, it is no longer an easily solvable problem considering that militancy has numerous faces and is spread throughout the country - not just confined to the north. The provinces of Punjab and Sindh are rife with militant groups popularly labeled as Punjabi Taliban. Insider sources believe that at least two to three groups act as state proxies.
Allegedly, some of their breakaway factions have turned against the state like the Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP), Lashkare Jhangavi (LeJ) and Lashkare Khorasan (LeK). Due to the absence of a clear policy, coupled with the complicity of the state, these groups and many other factions have now spread far and wide. Traveling around the country and spotting extremist elements, it comes as a surprise to see the police and intelligence holding back from cracking down on these elements. The police, whose information is mostly collected through human intelligence, feel frustrated over their inability to electronically monitor the movement.
For one, the police cannot intercept and track phone calls or Internet communication. The military intelligence that has this capability refuses to share it. The Nawaz Sharif government seems to be working on a new counter-terrorism policy which is inherently flawed. The new approach aims at disbanding the existing structure and creating a new one which many believe might not deliver.
Replacing police officers with army personnel is not likely to help eradicate violent extremism. Meanwhile, militants continue to kill and threaten. They attack religious minorities including Shias, and do not even spare the majority Barelvi sect. In the past month, there were two incidents of dead bodies found near Sufi shrines in Karachi with a warning that people must stay away from such places. On January 21, a renowned playwright, Asghar Nadeem Syed, was shot and wounded in Lahore. He was probably not killed in order to serve as a reminder to other Shias and the larger population that the state of Pakistan must now prepare to become an ideological theocracy.


ریاستی فورسز بلوچستان میں ہر قسم کی غیر قانونی اقدامات اُٹھانے میں آزاد ہوگئے ہیں، بی ایچ آر او

ریاستی فورسز بلوچستان میں ہر قسم کی غیر قانونی اقدامات اُٹھانے میں آزاد ہوگئے ہیں، بی ایچ آر او

بلوچ ہیومن رائٹس آرگنائزیشن کے ترجمان نے اپنے جاری کردہ بیان میں کہا کہ فورسز نے بلوچستان کے علاقے مشکے نوکجو میں ماورائے عدالت و قانون چھاپہ مارکر سلیمان بلوچ اور بی این ایم کے جنرل سیکریٹری ڈاکٹر منان بلوچ کے گھر کی چادرو چاردیواری کی تقدس کی پامالی کرتے ہوئے چار بزرگ عبدالحکیم ،تاج محمد ،سنوالی اور عطا بلوچ جس کی عمر 75/70کے درمیان ہے کو غیر قانونی طور پر گرفتار کرکے لاپتہ کردیا گیا ان کے علاوہ 2بچوں کو بھی اُٹھا کر اپنے ساتھ لے گئے ساتھ ہی گھروں میں موجود خواتین اور بزرگوں کو تشدد کا نشانہ بنایا گیا ۔ترجمان نے اپنے بیان میں مزید کہا کہ نوکجو سے چند قدم فاصلے پر النگی کے مقام پر فورسز قدیر بلوچ ولد سبو اور ماسٹر قیوم کو اغواء کر کے اپنے ساتھ لے گئے ہیں اس کے علاوہ ترجمان نے مزید کہا کہ 29 جنوری کی رات کو ریاستی فورسز کے اہلکاروں نے مشکے کے علاقے کو محامرہ میں رکھ کر علاقے میں ماورائے عدالت و قانون چھاپوں کا سلسلہ شروع کردیا گیا چھاپوں کے دوران سلام بلوچ اور زوہیب بلوچ کے گھروں کو جلا دیا گیا اس کے علاوہ گھر گھر غیر قانونی طور پر تلاشی لے کر گھروں میں موجود قیمتی اشیاء کو بھی اپنے ساتھ لے گئے اور ساتھ ہی بہت سے چیزوں کو جلا دیا گیا ۔بلوچ ہیومن رائٹس آرگنائزیشن کر ترجمان نے کہا کہ بلوچستان میں انسانی حقوق کی پامالی کی شدت اختیار کرتی جارہی ہے بلوچ فرزندوں کو اغواء کرکے بعد میں ان کی مسخ شدہ لاشیں پھینکے جاتے ہیں عام آبادیوں پر حملہ کئے جاتے ہیں ۔سیاسی کارکنوں کی ٹارگٹ کلنگ سمیت دیگر انسانی حقوق کی سنگین پامالیوں کے باوجود ریاستی سیکورٹی اداروں اور اہلکاروں کے خلاف کسی قسم کی قانونی کاروائی نہیں کی جاتی ہے جسکی وجہ سے ریاستی فورسز اور ریاستی ادارے ہر قسم کی غیر قانونی اقدامات اُٹھانے میں آزاد ہوگئے ہیں اور بلوچستان بھر میں عدم تحفظ اور خوف و حراس کا ماحول پیدا ہوچکا ہے ۔ریاستی زمہ دار اداروں سمیت عالمی انسانی حقوق کی تنظیموں کو بھی بلوچستان کی صورتحال کو بھانپتے ہوئے جلد از جلد عملی اور موثر اقدامات کرنے چاہیے تاکہ بلوچستان میں سیکورٹی فورسز کی جانب سے مسلسل انسانی حقوق کی پامالیوں کو روکا جاسکے ۔

Qadir Bakash s/o Miskaan Baloch was Resident Of Pirandar Area of Awran.

Qadir Bakash s/o Miskaan Baloch was Resident Of Pirandar Area of Awran ,He was 

Abducted By Pakistani Army Peerandr Area of Awran On 15 Septambar 2013 ,his 

Decomposed Body Found in a Mass Grave Containing at lest 169 Dead 

Bodies,discoverd in tootak Area of Khuzdar.


یہ اسلامی جمہوریہ پاکستان ہے شاید یہ الفاظ پاکستان کے مکر و چہرے کو چھپانے کیلئے ناکافی ہوں .


یہ اسلامی جمہوریہ پاکستان ہے شاید یہ الفاظ پاکستان کے مکر و چہرے کو چھپانے کیلئے ناکافی ہوں یا پاکستان اسلام کا قلعہ ہے یا پاکستان ایک اسلامی ایٹمی ملک ہے یہ تمام نام پاکستان جیسے مذہبی شدت پسند ملک کو نہ اسلامی و جمہوری بنا سکتے ہیں اور نہ اُنہیں اسلام کا قلعہ بنا سکتے ہیں. پاکستان اسلام کا قلعہ ہے یہ نعرہ صرف پاکستانی لگاتے ہیں ناکہ دنیا کے دیگر اسلامی ممالک و مسلم اقوام پاکستان کو اسلام کا قلعہ مانتے ہیں. اسلام اور مسلمانوں کو دنیا میں سب سے زیادہ نقصان اسی اسلامی قلعہ (پاکستان) نے پہنچایا, دنیا میں جہاں مسلم اقدار کو ٹھینس پہنچا اسی اسلامی قلعہ کی وجہ سے.
پاکستان ایک مذہبی شدت پسند ملک ہونے کیساتھ ساتھ دہشت گردوں کا عالمی مرکز بھی ہے دنیا میں کہیں بھی دہشت گردی کے کوئی واقعہ رونما ہو تو ضرور اسکا سراغ پاکستان سے جاملتا ہے. اگر آپکو کسی دہشت گرد کی تلاش ہو تو وہ کہیں نہیں ملتا ہو تو آپ اسے پاکستان میں ڈھونڈ سکتے ہیں چاہے اس نے پاکستان کا زندگی بھر سفر نہ کیا ہو لیکن پاکستان کے دہشت گرد اس کا پتا جانتے ہیں اس ملک میں جتنے اقوام بشمول مقبوضہ بلوچ قوم بستے ہیں تمام کے تمام مذہبی منافرت کے شکار ہیں.
~محراب خان بلوچ

(VBMP) International Voice of Baloch Missing Persons LongMarch The army tried to stop the Marchers.










Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Dr Aasim Sajjad Akhtar ,GS ,AWP Punjab delineating AWP plan of solidarity with#VBMPLongMarch at AWP protest against state terrorism in Balochistan at Islamabad

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=282552728561498

NewsEye 28th January 2014 . Pakistan establishment miss using universal declaration.


Look at this nonsense. How an army brigadier blatantly being rude to say that missing person case in Balochistan have been blown out of the proportion.




Look at this nonsense. How an army brigadier blatantly being rude to say that missing person case in Balochistan have been blown out of the proportion. They are bringing a security ordinance in Pakistan where Army can arrest any one on doubts and can make him disappeared legally. And they think it is alright as the same law is being practiced in the Western Democracies. Now these stupids are comparing their political and judicial institution with the west. I am asking these people, how many political activist in the Western Democracies have been forcefully disappeared. How many Mass graves were discovered of those political activist in the west. The answer is NONE. You moron!




Baloch Kids weeping in a protest over the discovering of mass graves in Balochistan.

Baloch Kids weeping in a protest over the discovering of mass graves in Balochistan.
 


The brave sons and daughters of Punjab are exposing the crude, ugly, beastly and dark face Pakistan to the people today in Islamabad.

The brave sons and daughters of Punjab are exposing the crude, ugly, beastly and dark face Pakistan to the people today in Islamabad. They stand up in solidarity with the people of Balochistan. They remain the only left group to rebuild the historical bridge between the left and Baloch nationalist. They look dignified and made their place in the history. "We should feel sorrow, but not sink under its oppression" Confucius.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Two women among six killed in grand scale military operation in Panjgur Balochistan .

According to Baloch Republican Party Media Cell sources that a large number of armored vehicles of Pakistani forces raided the Baloch villages in the Tasp, Panjgur and indiscriminately targeted the civilian populated areas. Six, including two women of Shahmeer Baloch’s family have been killed as army bombed his house in Tasp area in panjgur, BRP Media Cell reported. Sources said that Army is using Gunship helicopters and heavy artillery in Panjgur operation.  Many houses of the Baloch villagers were destroyed due to heavy bombardment of Pakistani security forces. Similarly, abductions of two Baloch youths reported in Sui.

Baloch genocide- 6 killed in Panjgur massacre, 15 dumped bodies found from a mass grave of Tootak,

Panjgur 25-01-2014 : Six including two women killed and dozens abducted in military operation from Panjgur.
According to details, Pakistani military besieged the Washbod village in Panjgur district before dawn last day. Military with the help of light artillery and gunship helicopters have at-least killed two men and a women and a women and two men were critically injured. Military blocked the access to the area, even medical help was denied to wounded one, all the three injured have died due to excessive bleeding.
Dozens of youth, men and women have been reportedly abducted by the military, from same area. Dozens of the houses have been destroyed in artillery shelling. Till the filling of this report area is under tight siege, and military cut down all the communication of the entire district.
Reports from Tootak area of Khuzdar district reveal the discovery of a mass grave. At least 15 bodies have been recovered from the grave. Locals fear that theses are the bodies of Baloch missing persons who were abducted by the Pakistani forces, and killed in inhuman torture.

Day72 of ‪#‎VBMPLongMarch‬ at Dera Ghazi Khan area. Hundreds of people join for ‪#‎WalkForJustice‬ against enforced disappearances in ‪#‎Balochistan.


Hundreds of Dera Ghazian’s welcomed and joined Baloch marchers in Dera Ghazi Khan

Dera Ghazi Khan:  Hundreds of people at Dera Ghazi Khan welcomed the Baloch marchers and many joined them to raise voice for the Human Rights for the missing persons.

According to the details the participants of the long march who are demanding to know the whereabouts, fate and the safe release of Baloch missing persons reached Dera Ghazi Khan where hundreds  of Baloch people welcomed the Baloch marchers.
The family members of missing persons launched their peaceful long march from Quetta and today it was the 72nd day of their historic long march. As per different reports more then 18,000 People have been involuntary disappeared by the Pakistan Army and it’s agencies and secrete services Since 2005. More then 800 Tortured Dead Bodies of the missing Persons have been recovered from different Parts of Balochistan and Karachi in the last Fourteen Months.
Earlier several times the Qadir Baloch who is leading the march and is the father of deceased Jalil Rekhi claimed that he has received life threats from the security personals as a consequence if he continued the March.
Many individuals and organizations demanded safety and security measures from the state apparatus of the long Marchers.
Dera Ghazi Khan currently a part of Punjab Provice is a Baloch Dominating Area and earlier was part of Balochistan and was leased to the British Empire known as part of British Balochistan before the patition of sub-continent.
The current warm welcome of the Baloch Marcher’s in the Punjab province by the Dera Ghazian’s is a sign and is also analyzed as the “Blood and Bone Relation”. Despite of serious life threats and vibrant signs of hard consequences from the Pakistan Army and state Secret Agencies today Thousands of People from Dera Ghazi Khan standing shoulder to shoulder with the people from different parts of Balochistan is showing more then a simple sign of supporting Human Rights.
The Baloch People of Dera Ghazi Khan had from time to time tried to raise their voice that historically, culturally, and socially they are very different from the people of Punjab, and demanded to join their Area as a Part of Balochistan. Pakistani Analysts and Think Tank Institutes had always tried to keep silent or diverted to keep away from discussing the issue of British Balochistan or about the Baloch Population in Dera Jath as a strategic Policy.

13 bodies recovered from Pakistan's mass grave

Quetta: At least 13 unidentified decomposed bodies have been recovered from a mass grave in Pakistan's restive Balochistan province. 

Eleven bodies were brought to the District Headquarters Hospital yesterday, which were decomposed beyond recognition, like the two discovered on Saturday, said medics. 

Vultures and crows hovering over the area had attracted the attention of locals to the desolate area who informed the administration about what they suspected to be a mass grave.
The mass grave was discovered in Tutak area, about 50 kilometres from Khuzdar, and it is feared that many more bodies may be in there. 

A total of 13 bodies have been recovered so far, Express Tribune daily reported today. 

"There could be more bodies in the grave. We saw human remains," an official told the daily on the condition of anonymity.

It was not known who had killed the people but relatives of missing persons fear the bodies could be of their loved ones, according to media reports. 

Assistant Commissioner of Khuzdar district Afzal Sarpara told reporters on Sunday the grave contained an unspecified number of bodies, most of which were decomposed and beyond recognition. 

"They appear to be a month old," he said. 

Deputy Commissioner of Khuzdar Waheed Shah said the Balochistan Levies resumed digging of the grave yesterday. 

"DNA tests will help us identify the bodies," he added. 

Separately, Provincial Home Minister Mir Sarfaraz Bugti denied media reports claiming that dozens of bodies were found in the mass grave. 

"An investigation is ongoing and the facts will be shared with public soon," he said. 

Meanwhile, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan expressed serious concerns over the grisly discovery and demanded an immediate and impartial inquiry. 

Khuzdar has been the worst-hit district in Balochistan, wrecked by violence from separatists and militants, and the situation has forced several families to migrate from the area. 

The issue of missing persons in the province has been taken up at the Balochistan High Court and the Supreme Court.
http://zeenews.india.com/news/south-asia/13-bodies-recovered-from-pakistan-s-mass-grave_907422.html

Activists demand UN inquiry into Balochistan mass graves.

Rights organizations have expressed shock over the discovery of mass graves in Pakistan's insurgency-marred Balochistan province and have called on the UN to send a fact-finding mission for an inquiry.
On January 25, three mass graves were discovered in the Khuzdar district of Pakistan's western Balochistan province. The corpses were too decomposed to be identified. As the news spread, the people gathered around the graves and started digging in the nearby area, where they unearthed two more mass graves.
The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) says that 169 bodies have so far been recovered from the graves. Pakistani officials, however, deny these claims, arguing that the total number of bodies amounts to only 15.
Pakistan's independent Human Rights Commission, HRCP, disputes the government's figures. "The residents of Khuzdar have told us that the number of dead bodies uncovered is much higher than 15," Zohra Yusuf, the HRCP chairperson, told DW. The rights activist linked the discovery of the graves to the ongoing Balochistan conflict between the separatists and Islamabad.
Balochistan, which borders Afghanistan and Iran, is rich in oil, gas, and minerals, yet it remains Pakistan's poorest province. Baloch activists accuse Islamabad of usurping their wealth, fueling a protracted separatist movement which has been going on for decades.
The armed struggle for Baloch independence intensified after the murder of the influential Baloch leader Akbar Bugti in 2006 in a military operation. Rebel Baloch groups like the Balochistan Liberation Army have repeatedly attacked security forces and state installations. Most of the rebel leadership is thought to be in the UK, Afghanistan and Dubai.
The missing link
The AHRC has expressed "shock and deep concern” over the discovery of the mass graves in a statement issued on January 27. The organization suspects that these are the corpses of the missing Balochs, who have allegedly been arrested and later unlawfully killed by the Pakistani security agencies.
Islamabad denies launching a military operation in the province, but confirms the deployment of thousands of paramilitary forces to quell the insurgency. There have been accusations of serious human rights violations against the security forces.
Local rights groups have the details of 8,000 people who they say have disappeared over the past ten years and haven't been seen since. According to the AHRC, the bullet-riddled bodies of 23 missing persons were discovered in different parts of Balochistan in January 2012. The rights group also claims that 56 Balochs were murdered and dumped on roadsides from August 2011 to January 2012.
"The crimes of the security agencies in Balochistan and the mass-scale disappearances and extrajudicial killings have now been exposed by the discoveries of these mass graves," the AHRC said.
The Voice for the Baloch Missing Persons (VBMP), an organization made up of relatives of the missing people, is currently undertaking a "long march" from the southeastern Karachi city to capital Islamabad to protest against the disappearances.
However, Sarfaraz Bugti, the Interior Minister of Balochistan, blames the Indian spy agency, Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), and Baloch separatist groups for the killing and dumping of corpses in the Khuzdar mass graves.
"We have ordered a DNA testing for the identification of these bodies. But I think the Baloch Republican Army, the Baloch Liberation Army, and the Baloch Liberation Front - all funded by the RAW, are behind these killings," Bugti told DW.
International inquiry
But experts say that Islamabad will not allow an independent inquiry in Balochistan, as it is likely to reveal the extent of rights abuses and unlawful activities in the province.
Local and international rights organizations say the Pakistani military is not allowing anybody to examine the Khuzdar mass graves. They have therefore urged the United Nations to send a fact-finding mission to investigate the incident.
"It must be pointed out that the people of Pakistan do not expect any proper and transparent investigation from their government and the security agencies as they themselves are involved in the killings, enforced disappearances and the concealment of the crimes. The importance of a UN report therefore cannot be over emphasized," the AHRC said.
 

Nazish Brohi, a social activist in Karachi, is also in favor of an international inquiry, but argues it should be ordered by Balochistan's provincial government, headed by Chief Minister Abdul Malik.
"The elected government of Balochistan should call for an international inquiry. It should come out and say that the issue is not in its control," Brohi told DW.
But Malik Siraj Akbar, a Washington-based Pakistani expert on Balochistan, says the conflict is not between Baloch separatists and the chief minister. "It is a conflict between the Baloch people and the Pakistani army and the federal government," Akbar said, adding that Malik could not do much to resolve this issue considering his limited influence over the army, the intelligence agencies and the Baloch separatists.
"Only an investigation conducted by credible organizations such as the United Nations, Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and similar international bodies will be acceptable to the Baloch people. In addition, the international community must play its role in bringing the people behind these crimes to justice," Akbar said.