Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Pakistan's Other Taliban.


Pakistan's Other Taliban

The sectarian war in Pakistan between militant Sunni and unarmed Shia Muslims is turning uglier by the day. A bomb blast targeting Shia pilgrims on September 18 in southwestern Balochistan province killed three people and also injured security guards who were officially assigned to protect the pilgrims from a terrorist attack. Sectarian offensives are expected every day but thwarted very infrequently.
The Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ), an underground Sunni extremist group that allegedly receives support from units of Pakistani intelligence agencies, has accepted responsibility for most of such attacks in the recent past.
The LeJ has extraordinarily increased its violent operations during this year. It has emerged as a dangerous force after succeeding in recruiting a new cadre of homegrown extremists. The freshly inducted fighters enjoy unmatched knowledge of local geography and safe hideouts. They are sophisticated shooters who are deeply motivated to live and die for what they deem as a "religious cause." Theirs is a cause designed to cleanse Pakistan of Shias.
The LeJ asks Shias to either quit Pakistan or convert into Sunni Islam. Both of the demands seem unacceptable considering the fact that Pakistan has the world's second highest Shia population. Many Shias serve as top-ranking professionals and enormously contribute to Pakistan's politics and economy.
The LeJ is rising as a confident, self-reliant, invincible and ambitious power that will lead in the near future Balochistan's march toward Islamization and expulsion or persecution of religious and sectarian minorities. There are scores of reasons why we should fear the rapid rise of the LeJ and Pakistani government's inaction against it.
Pakistan's handling of the LeJ is very similar to its disastrous experience of dealing with the Pakistani Taliban during the initial days. The country's security establishment created and patronized radical Islamic groups but kept underestimating them until they transformed into such monsters that become impossible to micromanage or dismantle.
On August 30, the LeJ target killed Zulfiqar Hussain Naqvi, a judge in Quetta, the capital of Balochistan province, along with his driver and security guard.
Besides sectarian reasons, the larger motivation behind Mr. Naqvi's killing was to intimidate and influence government institutions. Extremist groups carry out such attacks to dissuade government personnel from participating in counter-terrorism operations.
A LeJ spokesman says his organization would even target the Chief Justice of Pakistan if he takes stern action against some of the organization's detained operatives.
"Any judge who sentences our arrested activists will meet the fate of Naqvi," the spokesman warned in a statement published in the local media, "the Chief Justice and all other judges will be on our hit-list if they harden their attitude toward our activists whose cases are currently pending in the courts. We do not only issue warnings but also do what we warn to do."
It turned out to be true.
Only a week after murdering Judge Naqvi, the LeJ killed a top police officer in Quetta on September 7, 2012. The slain officer, Jamil Ahmed Kakar, had newly been promoted as the superintendent of police (Investigation branch). Colleagues in the police department and foes in the LeJ unanimously agree that Mr. Kakar was instrumental in painstakingly investigating the Lashkar's activities and taking action against key leaders of the terrorist outfit.
"Jamil Kakar was involved in the martyrdom of our colleagues," confirmed the LeJ spokesman.v
LeJ's dramatic rise is perturbing for the following reasons.
All top LeJ commanders in Balochistan come from lower-middle class Baloch families. The Balochs have historically remained a secular people with rare connections with forces that fought in the name of religion. Hundreds of Muslim religious schools established across Balochistan with the covert funding of Saudi Arabia and Pakistani government to counter the ongoing Baloch separatist movement richly provide manpower to Muslim extremist groups.
Left-wing Baloch nationalists admit that self- Jihadist groups are actively engaged in employing young Balochs from religious schools for their unholy battles. The regional nationalists describe this phenomenon as a "deliberate policy" of the Pakistani intelligence agencies to undermine their movement. Radical Islam, they say, is used as an antidote to address mounting anti-Pakistan sentiments in Balochistan.
At present, there are no overt tensions between Baloch nationalists and neo-Jihadists in the Baloch-populated districts. The nationalists say they are already engaged in a full-fledged battle against the Pakistani government and cannot afford to open another front against extremist Islamic groups. But the current non-interference policy in each other's operations may not last long. Tensions have been brewing, although slowly.
According to LeJ accounts, all of the organization's key leaders come from Baloch families.
The growth of Sunni extremism has come with new dimensions and fresh techniques of terrorism. For example, direct suicide blasts on Shia processions reduced in 2012 but the year witnessed an upsurge in mass killings of Shia pilgrims by intercepting passenger buses in various parts of Balochistan. The LeJ is actively involved in attacks on NATO supplies, too. In 2010, as many as 34 drivers were killed in Balochistan while attempting to transport goods to foreign forces stationed in Afghanistan.
The LeJ is steadily growing so big in Balochistan that, at one point, it will start considering its anti-Shia operations as an inadequate match with its huge infrastructure and extended network of operatives and sanctuaries. The organization is already closely connected with Taliban in Afghanistan and has renewed connections with Jundullah, the anti-Iran Sunni militant group. In common, all these groups share abhorrence for the Shias.
The sectarian killers are, in fact, Pakistan's other Taliban. Most of their top leaders do not face official action. They roam freely and make hate speeches across the country and incite violence against the Shias.
After the persecution of its chief, Abdolmalek Rigi, in the summer of 2010 by the Iranian authorities, Jundullah is too weak to continue with the robust suicide blasts it once used to conduct in Iranian cities under the leadership of Rigi. So, the Jundullah now continues (what Cricket fans call) 'net practice' with LeJ inside Pakistan until it fully regains the lost strength.
While the forces of Islamization consolidate their grip in Balochistan, there seems little interest on the part of the government or the regional opposition parties to cooperate with each other to collectively fight religious extremism. Promoting radicals may temporarily assist Pakistani government in fighting the nationalist-separatist insurgency but, in the long run, it is going to multiply the causes of unrest in Balochistan, making conflict resolution further impossible.
Malik Siraj Akbar is Editor in Chief, 'The Baloch Hal'; Author; Contributing Writer

Deceiving tactics of the Enemy.

<a href='http://balochwarna.com/features/articles.18/Pakistan039s-secret-dirty-war.html'>Pakistan's secret dirty war</a>

Opinions : 

By Sohaib Mengal
Propaganda has existed as ancient as there has been any record of reliable evidence in history. Religions, dictators, priests, governments and almost everyone, who has tried to influence its immediate target, have used propaganda for the good and the bad.

Propaganda is a systematic form of persuasion that is intended to transform or strengthen the emotions, attitudes and opinions of people towards an ideology or cause.

Propaganda was initially used for the propagation of faith and religious ideas. It was later adopted by businesses in their advertising and subsequently modern businesses started specially hiring public relations departments that used propaganda to spread favorable opinions about companies.

It took momentum with the introduction of printing press in the sixteenth century but the political sense of propaganda widely strengthened during World War 1, when various countries tried to persuade people for the justness of their cause as well as to hide the horrors of front line. Many stories, which never existed in actual, about enormous atrocities were used as entry cards in World War 1. Warring nations conducted propaganda operations on large scale. The major US propaganda agency, Committee on Public information, distributed more than 100 million posters and publications to increase the support for the war in public. In 1933 Hitler realized the potential of propaganda and appointed a particular minister for that reason.

But it is the dictators and occupiers that have taken the most effective use of propaganda. Several famous dictators used propaganda to achieve power. The effective use of education, motion pictures, press, and radio by Hitler is considered the most famous example of propaganda.

Recently there has been enormous use of propaganda by both sides in Afghan and Iraq war. The wars today have four dimensions, which is a combination of military, economic, political, and propaganda pressure against the enemy. The war is fought on all four fronts at once.

With a very strong media and various reasons, the Pakistani propaganda like any other occupier is very organized and institutionalized. Deceit has always been the trait of this Frankenstein state and it has reasons to do so – illegal occupations and the brutalities perpetrated against minorities. Spiced up with more than 100 TV channels, it has got all the necessary tools to fed anything in the minds of its public and, to an extent, international community.

It is not confined to this simplicity; the dishonest tactics are beyond comprehension to any ordinary person. The education system, judiciary, bureaucracy, economic institutions & media are fully crammed with deceitful and fraudulent tactics. It is through this strong organization of deception that this double standard nation has kept its occupation of the Baloch land intact.

The major Pakistani propaganda tool, which has been successfully used since many years, has been through its so-called education system. Though called education but in reality it is a technique to propagate false history enriched with false values. The true educators in democratic societies teach people how to think, but here we are told or rather forced what to think.

Baloch children are exposed to Pakistani propaganda and lies at a very young age through schooling. These forced feeding of so-called “Pakistani Ideology” based on religious hatred and lies ceases the skepticism of Baloch children throughout their lives. If we critically examine the Pakistani education system it is only making slaves out of us. The most a Baloch can get out of this system is to be a cleric or a government servant, who will do anything to serve his master and strengthen occupier’s illegal rule on Baloch land.

The other Pakistani organizations are also full of such pretense and cheating. The Judiciary is one of these organizations, which is working; in such a professional method that no one is realizing its deceitful devices. Even the Baloch leaders are seen applauding the role of judiciary in missing persons’ case. But if little skepticism is practiced and the background of what basically happening is monitored a smart lot of things get vivid.

Baloch sons are being abducted since long but the honorable chief justice of Pakistan never paid any heed, while at the same instance he wasted no time in taking suo moto notices on similar cases of Army backed Jihadist organizations. The bodies of Baloch youth started falling, in what is called “Kill and Dump” policy, since June 2010 and nearly 500 activists, which were the cream of Baloch society, were killed since then. But nothing was said or done by the chief justice.

When it was already too late and all the famous and sincere activists were killed, which also drew an enormous amount of international pressure, the judiciary came in to rescue the Pakistani Army and Intelligence agencies by hearing the Baloch plight in Supreme Court. Few missing Baloch were produced on the orders of the court. The question here arises that why was it so that similar steps were not taken when the first body of an activist fell or in fact when the first Baloch youth went missing? When the court has enough power to produce 11 Baloch missing persons then why cannot it order to produce all Baloch missing persons?

The reality is that Pakistani judiciary is being portrayed or in fact it has gained, that too through lies, an image of a sovereign and independent entity in front of international community. To deceive the International community and thwart the international pressure, nothing is more appropriate for Pakistanis then to take the help of Judiciary and Iftikhar Chahudary. Now they can easily save their skin in front of international community by taking the excuse of Judiciary’s intervention.

The Media, the most active of all, is not an exception. Though portrayed independent, it is directly being controlled by the Pakistani state. No doubt private bodies own the channels but the anchors and agents are implanted in such a manner that media is totally under state’s control. Whatsoever the state wants to propagate, it does that through these anchors and paid pseudo-intellectuals. The channels fail to report any brutalities inflicted upon the Baloch people but promulgate any killing of settlers through out their programs. Any news that involves brutalities by Pakistani Army is completely censored whereas they waste no opportunity to portray the security forces as pious and innocent.

A recent example is that of Chahudary Aslam, a criminal that holds a police office. Whole Pakistani mainstream media was portraying him as a hero, indirectly appreciating him to kill more Baloch in lyari. There lays no doubt that along with the state the contempt against Baloch lies even in the Pakistani public. The whole Pakistani nation cherishes when Baloch are killed in any part of Baloch land. This has only become possible through the forced injection of news in the minds of public.

Ways to Counter it: What is happening really needs to be countered or the Baloch struggle for its independence can fail badly. Propaganda can only be countered through making available the true facts. The Arab spring is a big example and an opportunity to learn for the Baloch nation.

Organized campaigning through social media has done wonders in Arab spring and can do the same for Baloch nation. The key is getting organized and forgetting the pity differences amongst us. Citizen journalism needs to be promoted. The Baloch activists should make videos or take pictures of military activities or movements of Pakistani forces as much as it is possible. Organized measures then need to be taken to make it viral on Internet. Though it sounds complicated but a little effort will be of enormous benefit.

The most complicated problem is of Pakistani education that is intruding the minds of our children. Unfortunately there is no immediate solution to this problem. Barring people to get education will be the most criminal and harmful thing one can do with its nation but establishing alternatives can ease up the situation. Strong alternatives to teach the reality to Baloch children need to be introduced on urgent basis.

The writer is a CC member and international representative of BSO-Azad. He can be reached atmirsohaib7@gmail.com. He tweets at http://twitter.com/mirsohaib

Pakistan's secret dirty war


<a href='http://balochwarna.com/features/articles.18/Pakistan039s-secret-dirty-war.html'>Pakistan's secret dirty war</a>

Articles : 

BY Declan Walsh
The bodies surface quietly, like corks bobbing up in the dark. They come in twos and threes, a few times a week, dumped on desolate mountains or empty city roads, bearing the scars of great cruelty. Arms and legs are snapped; faces are bruised and swollen. Flesh is sliced with knives or punctured with drills; genitals are singed with electric prods. In some cases the bodies are unrecognisable, sprinkled with lime or chewed by wild animals. All have a gunshot wound in the head.

This gruesome parade of corpses has been surfacing in Balochistan, Pakistan's largest province, since last July. Several human rights groups, including Amnesty International, have accounted for more than 100 bodies – lawyers, students, taxi drivers, farm workers. Most have been tortured. The last three were discovered on Sunday.

If you have not heard of this epic killing spree, though, don't worry: neither have most Pakistanis. Newspaper reports from Balochistan are buried quietly on the inside pages, cloaked in euphemisms or, quite often, not published at all.

The forces of law and order also seem to be curiously indifferent to the plight of the dead men. Not a single person has been arrested or prosecuted; in fact, police investigators openly admit they are not even looking for anyone. The stunning lack of interest in Pakistan's greatest murder mystery in decades becomes more understandable, however, when it emerges that the prime suspect is not some shady gang of sadistic serial killers, but the country's powerful military and its unaccountable intelligence men.


This is Pakistan's dirty little war. While foreign attention is focused on the Taliban, a deadly secondary conflict is bubbling in Balochistan, a sprawling, mineral-rich province along the western borders with Afghanistan and Iran. On one side is a scrappy coalition of guerrillas fighting for independence from Pakistan; on the other is a powerful army that seeks to quash their insurgency with maximum prejudice. The revolt, which has been rumbling for more than six years, is spiced by foreign interests and intrigues – US spy bases, Chinese business, vast underground reserves of copper, oil and gold.

And in recent months it has grown dramatically worse. At the airport in Quetta, the provincial capital, a brusque man in a cheap suit marches up to my taxi with a rattle of questions. "Who is this? What's he doing here? Where is he staying?" he asks the driver, jerking a thumb towards me. Scribbling the answers, he waves us on. "Intelligence," says the driver.

The city itself is tense, ringed by jagged, snow-dusted hills and crowded with military checkposts manned by the Frontier Corps (FC), a paramilitary force in charge of security. Schools have recently raised their walls; sand-filled Hesco barricades, like the ones used in Kabul and Baghdad, surround the FC headquarters. In a restaurant the waiter apologises: tandoori meat is off the menu because the nationalists blew up the city's gas pipeline a day earlier. The gas company had plugged the hole that morning, he explains, but then the rebels blew it up again.

The home secretary, Akbar Hussain Durrani, a neatly suited, well-spoken man, sits in a dark and chilly office. Pens, staplers and telephones are neatly laid on the wide desk before him, but his computer is blank. The rebels have blown up a main pylon, he explains, so the power is off. Still, he insists, things are fine. "The government agencies are operating in concert, everyone is acting in the best public interest," he says. "This is just a . . . political problem." As we speak, a smiling young man walks in and starts to take my photo; I later learn he works for the military's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency.

We cut across the city, twisting through the backstreets, my guide glancing nervously out the rear window. The car halts before a tall gate that snaps shut behind us. Inside, a 55-year-old woman named Lal Bibi is waiting, wrapped in a shawl that betrays only her eyes, trembling as she holds forth a picture of her dead son Najibullah. The 20-year-old, who ran a shop selling motorbike parts, went missing last April after being arrested at an FC checkpost, she says. His body turned up three months later, dumped in a public park on the edge of Quetta, badly tortured. "He had just two teeth in his mouth," she says in a voice crackling with pain. She turns to her father, a turbaned old man sitting beside her, and leans into his shoulder. He grimaces.

Bibi says her family was probably targeted for its nationalist ties – Najibullah's older brother, now dead, had joined the "men in the mountains" years earlier, she says. Now a nephew, 28-year-old Maqbool, is missing. She prays for him, regularly calling the hospitals for any sign of him and, occasionally, the city morgues.

Over a week of interviews in Karachi and Quetta, I meet the relatives of seven dead men and nine "disappeared" – men presumed to have been abducted by the security forces. One man produces a mobile phone picture of the body of his 22-year-old cousin, Mumtaz Ali Kurd, his eyes black with swelling and his shirt drenched in blood. A relative of Zaman Khan, one of three lawyers killed in the past nine months, produces court papers. A third trembles as he describes finding his brother's body in an orchard near Quetta.

Patterns emerge. The victims were generally men between 20 and 40 years old – nationalist politicians, students, shopkeepers, labourers. In many cases they were abducted in broad daylight – dragged off buses, marched out of shops, detained at FC checkposts – by a combination of uniformed soldiers and plain-clothes intelligence men. Others just vanished. They re-emerge, dead, with an eerie tempo – approximately 15 bodies every month, although the average was disturbed last Saturday when eight bodies were found in three locations across Balochistan.

Activists have little doubt who is behind the atrocities. Human Rights Watch says "indisputable" evidence points to the hand of the FC, the ISI and its sister agency, Military Intelligence. A local group, Voice for Missing Persons, says the body count has surpassed 110. "This is becoming a state of terror," says its chairman, Naseerullah Baloch.

The army denies the charges, saying its good name is being blemished by impersonators. "Militants are using FC uniforms to kidnap people and malign our good name," says Major General Obaid Ullah Khan Niazi, commander of the 46,000 FC troops stationed in Balochistan. "Our job is to enforce the law, not to break it."

Despairing relatives feel cornered. Abdul Rahim, a farmer wearing a jewelled skullcap, is from Khuzdar, a hotbed of insurgent violence. He produces court papers detailing the abduction of his son Saadullah in 2009. First he went to the courts but then his lawyer was shot dead. Then he went to the media but the local press club president was killed. Now, Rahim says, "nobody will help in case they are targeted too. We are hopeless."

Balochistan has long been an edgy place. Its vast, empty deserts and long borders are a magnet for provocateurs of every stripe. Taliban fighters slip back and forth along the 800-mile Afghan border; Iranian dissidents hide inside the 570-mile frontier with Iran. Drug criminals cross the border from Helmand, the world's largest source of heroin, on their way to Iran or lonely beaches on the Arabian Sea. Wealthy Arab sheikhs fly into remote airstrips on hunting expeditions for the houbara bustard, a bird they believe improves their lovemaking. At Shamsi, a secretive airbase in a remote valley in the centre of the province, CIA operatives launch drones that attack Islamists in the tribal belt.

The US spies appreciate the lack of neighbours – Balochistan covers 44% of Pakistan yet has half the population of Karachi. The province's other big draw is its natural wealth. At Reko Diq, 70 miles from the Afghan border, a Canadian-Chilean mining consortium has struck gold, big-time. The Tethyan company has discovered 4bn tonnes of mineable ore that will produce an estimated 200,000 tonnes of copper and 250,000 ounces of gold per year, making it one of the largest such mines in the world. The project is currently stalled by a tangled legal dispute, but offers a tantalising taste of Balochistan's vast mineral riches, which also includes oil, gas, platinum and coal. So far it is largely untapped, though, and what mining exists is scrappy and dangerous. On 21 March, 50 coal workers perished in horrific circumstances when methane gas flooded their mine near Quetta, then catastrophically exploded.

Two conflicts are rocking the province. North of Quetta, in a belt of land adjoining the Afghan border, is the ethnic Pashtun belt. Here, Afghan Taliban insurgents shelter in hardline madrasas and lawless refugee camps, taking rest in between bouts of battle with western soldiers in Afghanistan. It is home to the infamous "Quetta shura", the Taliban war council, and western officials say the ISI is assisting them. Some locals agree. "It's an open secret," an elder from Kuchlak tells me. "The ISI gave a fleet of motorbikes to local elders, who distributed them to the fighters crossing the border. Nobody can stop them."

The other conflict is unfolding south of Quetta, in a vast sweep that stretches from the Quetta suburbs to the Arabian Sea, in the ethnic Baloch and Brahui area, whose people have always been reluctant Pakistanis. The first Baloch revolt erupted in 1948, barely six months after Pakistan was born; this is the fifth. The rebels are splintered into several factions, the largest of which is the Balochistan Liberation Army. They use classic guerrilla tactics – ambushing military convoys, bombing gas pipelines, occasionally lobbing rockets into Quetta city. Casualties are relatively low: 152 FC soldiers died between 2007 and 2010, according to official figures, compared with more than 8,000 soldiers and rebels in the 1970s conflagration.

But this insurgency seems to have spread deeper into Baloch society than ever before. Anti-Pakistani fervour has gripped the province. Baloch schoolchildren refuse to sing the national anthem or fly its flag; women, traditionally secluded, have joined the struggle. Universities have become hotbeds of nationalist sentiment. "This is not just the usual suspects," says Rashed Rahman, editor of the Daily Times, one of few papers that regularly covers the conflict.

At a Quetta safehouse I meet Asad Baloch, a wiry, talkative 22-year-old activist with the Baloch Students' Organisation (Azad). "We provide moral and political support to the fighters," he says. "We are making people aware. When they are aware, they act." It is a risky business: about one-third of all "kill and dump" victims were members of the BSO.

Baloch anger is rooted in poverty. Despite its vast natural wealth, Balochistan is desperately poor – barely 25% of the population is literate (the national average is 47%), around 30% are unemployed and just 7% have access to tap water. And while Balochistan provides one-third of Pakistan's natural gas, only a handful of towns are hooked up to the supply grid.

The insurgents are demanding immediate control of the natural resources and, ultimately, independence. "We are not part of Pakistan," says Baloch.


Well-armed Baloch insurgents in the contested region south of the capital Quetta. Photograph: Banaras Khan/AFP
His phone rings. News comes through that another two bodies have been discovered near the coast. One, Abdul Qayuum, was a BSO activist. Days later, videos posted on YouTube show an angry crowd carrying his bloodied corpse into a mortuary. He had been shot in the head.

The FC commander, Maj Gen Niazi, wearing a sharp, dark suit and with neatly combed hair (he has just come from a conference) says he has little time for the rebel demand. "The Baloch are being manipulated by their leaders," he says, noting that the scions of the main nationalist groups live in exile abroad – Hyrbyair Marri in London; Brahamdagh Bugti in Geneva. "They are enjoying the life in Europe while their people suffer in the mountains," he says with a sigh.

Worse again, he adds, they were supported by India. The Punjabi general offers no proof for his claim, but US and British intelligence broadly agree, according to the recent WikiLeaks cables. India sees Balochistan as payback for Pakistani meddling in Kashmir – which explains why Pakistani generals despise the nationalists so much. "Paid killers," says Niazi. He vehemently denies involvement in human rights violations. "To us, each and every citizen of Balochistan is equally dear," he says.

Civilian officials in the province, however, have another story. Last November, the provincial chief minister, Aslam Raisani, told the BBC that the security forces were "definitely" guilty of some killings; earlier this month, the province's top lawyer, Salahuddin Mengal, told the supreme court the FC was "lifting people at will". He resigned a week later.

However, gross human rights abuses are not limited to the army. As the conflict drags on, the insurgents have become increasingly brutal and ruthless. In the past two years, militants have kidnapped aid workers, killed at least four journalists and, most disturbingly, started to target "settlers" – unarmed civilians, mostly from neighbouring Punjab, many of whom have lived in Balochistan for decades. Some 113 settlers were killed in cold blood last year, according to government figures – civil servants, shopkeepers, miners. On 21 March, militants riding motorbikes sprayed gunfire into a camp of construction workers near Gwadar, killing 11; the Baloch Liberation Front claimed responsibility. Most grotesque, perhaps, are the attacks on education: 22 school teachers, university lecturers and education officials have been assassinated since January 2008, causing another 200 to flee their jobs.

As attitudes harden, the middle ground is being swept away in tide of bloodshed. "Our politicians have been silenced," says Habib Tahir, a human rights lawyer in Quetta. "They are afraid of the young." I ask a student in Quetta to defend the killing of teachers. "They are not teachers, they work for the intelligence agencies," one student tells me. "They are like thieves coming into our homes. They must go."

The Islamabad government seems helpless to halt Balochistan's slide into chaos. Two years ago, President Asif Ali Zardari announced a sweeping package of measures intended to assuage Baloch grievances, including thousands of jobs, a ban on new military garrisons and payment of $1.4bn (£800m) in overdue natural gas royalties. But violence has hijacked politics, the plan is largely untouched, and anaemic press coverage means there is little outside pressure for action.

Pakistan's foreign allies, obsessed with hunting Islamists, have ignored the problem. "We are the most secular people in the region, and still we are being ignored," says Noordin Mengal, who represents Balochistan on the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.

In this information vacuum, the powerful do as they please. Lawyer Kachkol Ali witnessed security forces drag three men from his office in April 2009. Their bodies turned up five days later, dead and decomposed. After telling his story to the press, Ali was harassed by military intelligence, who warned him his life was in danger. He fled the country. "In Pakistan, there is only rule of the jungle," he says by phone from Lørenskog, a small Norwegian town where he won asylum last summer. "Our security agencies pick people up and treat them like war criminals," he says. "They don't even respect the dead."

Balochistan's dirty little war pales beside Pakistan's larger problems – the Taliban, al-Qaida, political upheaval. But it highlights a very fundamental danger – the ability of Pakistanis to live together in a country that, under its Islamic cloak, is a patchwork of ethnicities and cultures. "Balochistan is a warning of the real battle for Pakistan, which is about power and resources," says Haris Gazdar, a Karachi-based researcher. "And if we don't get it right, we're headed for a major conflict."

Before leaving Quetta I meet Faiza Mir, a 36-year-old lecturer in international relations at Quetta's Balochistan University. Militants have murdered four of her colleagues in the past three years, all because they were "Punjabi". Driving on to the campus, she points out the spots where they were killed, knowing she could be next.

"I can't leave," says Mir, a sparky woman with an irrepressible smile. "This is my home too." And so she engages in debate with students, sympathising with their concerns. "I try to make them understand that talk is better than war," she says.

But some compromises are impossible. Earlier on, students had asked Mir to remove a portrait of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Pakistan's founding father, from her office wall. Mir politely refused, and Jinnah – an austere lawyer in a Savile Row suit - still stares down from her wall.

But how long will he stay there? "That's difficult to say," she answers.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/ ... akistans-secret-dirty-war

Enforced Disappearances and extra judicial killings: Systematic Genocide in Balochistan

<a href='http://balochwarna.com/features/articles.18/Pakistan039s-secret-dirty-war.html'>Pakistan's secret dirty war</a>

Articles : 

By Nawaz Bugti
Sit back and relax, take a little time, thinking of any suitable word for the feelings of Mehlab Baloch, an eight year old baby, carrying a play card in a protest camp against illegal abduction and enforced disappearance of her father, in scorching sun of Islamabad. I bet you fail, even in case of your mother tongue. Because enforced disappearance is such an inhuman act that even imagination of the pain of victim’s family is not possible for any one in senses. It is impossible for anyone to realize the painful situation of these tormented families that how do they live with uncertain fate of their beloved ones. There isn’t any suggested therapy for this sort of enforced empty nest syndrome by the psychologists, world over. 

It is not a new phenomena, but tragic incidents of Balkan conflict, unfortunate Tamil youth and ill-fated children of Africa drawn the serious attention of international community towards enforced disappearances. In early nineties International organizations of human rights took some initiatives, while on December 18, 1992 United Nations adopted a declaration on the protection of individuals from enforced disappearance which is known as resolution 47/133 under same title. Moreover, the International Convention for the Protection of all Persons from Enforced Disappearance entered into force on 23 December 2010 and August 30, 2011. It was the First UN International Day of the Disappeared. United Nations Working Group on Enforced or involuntary Disappearances called it “a special day to spotlight this heinous crime, and to remind victims, including the families and associations of victims of those who disappeared, that they are not alone”, in their statement issued at First UN International Day of the Disappeared .

War is definitely terrible of all the situations, and in war both combatants and non combatants suffer alike. Baloch Nation is in literal war like situation with a military monster of the region – Pakistan.

As military has been ruling Pakistan since its creation with the help of notorious secret agencies and political goons, so they are the real master of all in the land of so called pure, where nothing is pure in-fact, except terrorism. Unethical Inter Services Intelligence and Military Intelligence commonly known as ISI and MI respectively, keep abducted Baloch men and women in their torture cells with impunity. Beside their famous torture cells of Kulli Camp-Quetta and Bureeda Camp-Winder, they have network of interrogation centers spread all over Balochistan, known as Field Investigating Units or FIUs. Fifth columns of Pakistani military, like so called Peace Force, Sipah-e-Shuhda, and Balochistan Mutahida Mahaz are helping hands of their masters to carry out systematic ethnic cleansing of Baloch Nation. Pakistani military abducted thousands of Baloch youth, and hundreds are killed and dumped, the number of unidentified graves is increasing by the passage of the time. There is a huge cry from human right organs; while Punjabi oppressor think it is foolishly clever, trying to make fool the entire world by denying any violation of human rights. They think this sort of inhuman war technique is purely their own devilish creativity and they can keep the truth hidden.

Corroborating Evidences 

The Baloch Republican Party, the Baloch Students Organization – BSO AZAD, the Baloch National Movement, the Baloch National Voice and other stake holders, terms the Baloch genocide as a literal holocaust, which they believe is more intense than the ethnic cleansing of Bosnian Muslims by Serb Armies. Recent findings of Pakistani Supreme Court justify their claim. Though the Supreme Court of Pakistan is dictated by Pakistani military establishment, and Justice is limited inside defined lines, but due to irrefutable video evidences produced in the court by local police, made the Chief Justice to make a categorical observation that “People are abducted by FC (a paramilitary force) in day light.” 

Parliament of Balochistan consists of all paid stooges of ISI, but the violation of human rights on such a massive scale forced the sitting ministers to speak truth. Mr.Sadiq Umrani, Provincial Minister for Communication and Works, speaking at assembly floor revealed “I was on my way to Quetta, with provincial Minister for Interior Affairs Mr.Zafar Zahri, and another Minister, we witnessed FC arrested three Balochs from main highway, two days later their mutilated dead bodies were dumped in a waste site.”

Instead of any serious probe, on the advice of military, Chief Minister sacked Mr.Sadiq Umrani, and handed over his port folio to a well known drug trafficker. Moreover, his younger brother Mr. Abdulsattar Umrani was abducted by the same forces to teach a lesson to said minister for his future endeavors.

According to Baloch Voice for Missing Persons – an NGO working for the safe release of abducted Baloch, more than 14,000 Baloch men and women have been abducted in recent years, while five hundred plus mutilated bodies have surfaced so far, all of them were abducted by Pakistani military in presence of their family and folks. The victims were subjected to brutal torture before they were killed in-custody and their bodies dumped in desolated areas.

Abducting a person means destroying their entire family that includes their childen’s education, deprivation of livelihood, severe mental distress and in certain cases they lose their shelter even. In case of Mr.Rauf S/o Meer Jan Marri ten members of the single family have been abducted by Pakistani military in provincial capital Quetta. Guess how he scratches survival for the rest of his family, who will fight for the rights and release of his family members? 

Mr.Ali Asghar Bangulzai is missing till date from his abduction at October 18, 2002. His abduction by ISI was once confirmed by than Corps Commander Quetta, General Abdul Qadir. Afterwards at the pressure of military establishment he denied to own his previous statements and made a better deal for himself. General (Rtd) Abdul Qadir is member of the central committee of Punjabi main stream political party –Pakistan Muslim League (N), and Member of National Assembly now. 

Sangat Sana Baloch, an active member of Baloch Republican Party and former Senior Vice President of BSO-AZAD, was abducted from Mastung at December 07, 2009, photographic evidence of his custody along with the official record of the concerned Police Station were produced in the court of law, but arrogant and inhuman military of this rouge, naĂŻve and fragile state killed him, his mutilated body was found dumped with several marks of torture and thirty bullet wounds at February 13, 2012. His family died every moment for 798 long days.

Mr.Nadeem Afzal Gondal, a legislator of ruling Pakistan Peoples’ Party said, “I am not afraid of any one and I have submitted my report in which it was proved that a serving colonel killed the Baloch student leader”. 
According to reports he was answering a question in the National Assembly regarding an inquiry of a Baloch Student`s murder in Khuzdar, as he was head of the inquiry committee. Report of Mr.Gondal is sent to dormant and there does not seem any action to be taken against the culprits mentioned, as the history of military shows.

Immoral Pakistani military did not even spare the Baloch women, Banuk Zarina Marri, Bibi Sabhai and Wazeeran Bibi are few among the scores of Baloch women abducted by Pakistani military. Their fate still remains unknown. Pakistani forces have stinking reputation of mistreating women during war of liberation of Bengladesh in 1970 – then East Pakistan. Baloch fear the shameless Pakistani State may not feel any embarrassment to manage unofficial brothels, as it is famous for Pakistanis that they can sell their mothers for a few cents. 

A Baloch man, who was arrested by a state agency and kept in military torture cell almost for nine months, narrated the story of Banuk Zarina Marri, to Reporters Without Borders (Reporters Sans Frontiers, RSF), the International Red Cross, and at Woolwich Court in London. The current whereabouts of the young woman are not known. It has been asserted by these HR organs that “women who are fighting for the liberation of Balochistan are being arrested by the state agencies and being forced into sex slavery in their custody”.

The provincial chief minister, Aslam Raisani, told the BBC that the security forces were "definitely" guilty of some killings. In a hearing in Supreme Court, the province's top lawyer, Salahuddin Mengal, told the Supreme Court that FC was "lifting people at will". 

Precedents tell us that individuals are abducted either to suppress unwanted voices, or to detain those who do not match the ideology of dominating party. But in case of Balochistan it is more likely the situation of Balkan conflict. Enforced disappearances in Balochistan are even more dangerous, because it is clear Pakistani State is carrying out a systematic ethnic cleansing of Baloch Nation, very silently. That includes extra-judicial killing of political leaders, intellectuals, Students, professionals, poets and artists. 

Political Vanguard, abducted, killed and dumped 

As political leadership of any nation is considered as the vanguard and its political leadership who can manage a coherent procedural path to achieve their national goals. Therefore they naturally get targeted at first. A weak ideology may not sustain the losses of political figures and it becomes easy for invaders to secure their oppressing position much longer. Military mafia of Pakistan followed the same pattern, after directly targeting Baloch leadership Nawab Muhammad Akbar Khan Bugti, Nawabzada Balach Marri and their Comrades; they started abductions at large scale.

Mr. Ghulam Muhammad Baloch –President of Baloch National Movement, Mr. Sher Muhammad Baloch – Joint Secretary of Baloch Republican Party and Lala Munir Baloch- General Secretary of Baloch National Front were among the early victims. These veteran Baloch leaders were abducted from the chamber of their lawyer after getting bail from the apex court. Just after five days their dead bodies were thrown from a military helicopter in Peedarak area of Turbat Balochistan. Human Rights Commission of Pakistan finds “as per the eye witness statement and previous abduction cases of the Baloch leaders show that the secret security forces of Pakistan had abducted the three Baloch Nationalist leaders.” 

Jaleel Reki – Central Information Secretary of Baloch Republican Party (BRP), a hard rock nationalist was abducted and kept in confinement for 1012 days. When military failed to break the man of steel and iron nerves they just killed and dumped him in Aap Sar area of Turbat. In the case of Reki the Chief Minister of Balochistan himself confirmed that Jaleel Reki had been arrested by ISI, and refused to intervene. Prominent Human rights defender Amina Masood Janjua said in her affidavit submitted before Supreme Court of the State. Pakistani military is determined to show extreme barbarism to send a shut up call for all those who were in the same line. 

The Intelligentsia Silenced 

It is really impossible to enslave any nation until their intellectual class is functional. Scholars and philosophers do not only nurture the brains but they safe guard the national heritage as well. The National intelligentsia is indeed the refined shape of National institutions. It takes ages to develop institutions at par. To mute the masses it becomes necessary for oppressors to eliminate all those who are capable to understand, explain and educate their nation about the tyrants. 

Pakistani military realized the fact and started systematically targeting Baloch teachers, scholars and philosophers. Professor Ghulam Hussain Saba Dastyari, known as Qandeel-e-Baloch or Baloch Beacon, was not just a teacher at Balochistan University but he himself was a university for Baloch youth. This brave son of soil got target killed by ISI in day light on main Sariab Road Quetta and Baloch nation is deprived of a teacher of generations. But the state realized killing a philosopher never kills the philosophy. As they term Baloch a wild creature and want to eliminate and replace them with so called civic citizens of Punjab, so they strategically intense the abduction of educators. Specifically teachers, writers and poets were the main targets as they can quickly mange to educate the masses with comparatively lesser efforts.

Abdul Ghani- Teacher, Zar Gull Marri – Lady Teacher, Naseer Kamalan – Poet and Aqeel Pervaiz – Writer are a few names among the jewels in Baloch heritage broken to pieces by Pakistani military. Hundreds of Scholars are still facing brutal torture in illegal confinement.

Abduction of Students, Generations on Stake

Students are considered back bone of a nation, they are young and energetic, keen to learn and react timely. In South Asian societies where youth makes almost 35% of the total population, they are in the position to decide the National Fate. Energetic youth, with capabilities to confront the oppressor is damn dangerous for the tyrants. To spoil the youth means conformity of slavery for many upcoming generations. To eradicate the efficient resistive force, State authorities initiated a hostile campaign of abductions against Baloch students who were politically mature. BRSO and BSO-Azad are chosen targets of ruthless tyrants, while random pick, kill and dump policy for Baloch Students is enforced with all the brutalities.

Altaf Ahmad Bugti – Chairman of Baloch Republican Students Organization and Zakir Majeed Baloch -Senior Vice Chairman of Baloch Student Organization – Azad are still in illegal confinement of Pakistani forces. Thousands of Baloch students like Altaf Ahmad Bugti and Zakir Majeed Baloch are abducted in day light from universities, homes or the highways. They have been denied of fair trial and never produced in any court of law since their detention. Their whereabouts are still unknown and defiantly their families lost the hopes of justice. 

Hundreds of students like Qambar Chaker of BSO-Azad and of Khuda Bakhsh of BRSO have been killed in custody after sever torture and their bodies were dumped in highlands. Human rights organs including Amnesty International and Human rights council of Pakistan raised their voice against inhuman behavior of Pakistani State but military pays no heed to any cry.

Nation deprived of professionals

Socio-economic strength of a society is directly dependent upon the human resource assets and professional capabilities of individuals. Qualitative, social and scientific contributions are important factors to build a nation in this competitive era. Technical and economic weaknesses of a nation only strengthen the chains of slavery. 

Pakistani military determined to destroy the Baloch nation and will never let go of any chance of oppression. Baloch Doctors, Engineers, Journalists, lawyers and scientists are among the victims of abductions, kill and dump policy of the State. Samiullah Baloch - Engineer, Rahim Baksh Baloch – Doctor , Zaman Marri and Ali Sher Kurd – Advocates, senior lawyers of Balochistan High Court, Ilyas Nizar- Journalist , Siddique Eido- Human rights Defender, Ali Ahmed Marri- a professional builder, Moulana Shoaib Ahmed –A religious Cleric, Khuda-e-Rahim Bangulzai – A government official, Sardar Yousaf Langove – A responsible tribal chief, Muhammad Hayat Muhammad Hasani – A businessman , Abdul Sattar – A teacher, are the few names among the hundreds of Baloch professionals who are extra judicially killed after abduction.

It’s believed that journalists draw the first draft of history, in Balochistan 22 journalists are killed within four years and abduction of journalists is feared to be in hundreds. Balochistan is declared one of the most dangerous places for journalists in the world. Hamid Mir , a Senior Journalists of print and electronic media, said on record “for a journalist, It is easy to move in Iraq, Afghanistan and Gaza than in Balochistan” Number of Baloch professionals abducted by the State authorities is growing and misery of families getting multiplied by every day. 

Culture overturned

“Culture in all its dimensions, is a fundamental component of sustainable development. As a sector of activity, through tangible and intangible heritage, creative industries and various forms of artistic expressions, culture is a powerful contributor to economic development, social stability and environmental protection. As a repository of knowledge, meanings and values that permeate all aspects of our lives. Culture also defines the way human beings live and interact both at local and global scales”. UNESCO (The power of culture for development)

Such an important component of society could not be safe when the whole nation is facing a literal genocide. Pakistani military targeted the main pillars of culture and abducted dozens of Baloch Poets, Singers and folk icons. Naseer Kamalan – renowned poet was abducted by Pakistani military, his mutilated body was dumped later on. Reporting Naseer Kamalan’s death, Human rights watch hold “Military, Paramilitary Troops accountable for abuses”. Famous Balochi folk singer Ali Jan Saqib is among those who could not survive the torture during their abduction, and his bullet riddled body surfaced from Khuzdar some 300 kilometers away from his place of abduction. Still there are many of Baloch poets and singers in abduction without any trail.

Wait and Watch Policy of International Community

These are the glimpse from Pakistani occupied Balochistan, while in Iranian occupied Baloch land, Nation is facing even worst. The religious extremist regime of Iran does not hesitate to hang dozens of Baloch on main squares of Tehran. Fear of people may be guessed by the fact that no one dares to unhook the bodies off the cross for several days. 

Baloch as a nation protested in all their capacity. First time in Baloch history, Baloch women came into streets staged rallies, and faced bullets of military during peaceful protest gatherings. Families of Baloch abducted nationals are sitting in protest camps for last three years in front of different press clubs. The irony is Pakistani Supreme Court, Lawyers, Politicians and Police, all on record confessed the forced disappearances are nothing but illegal abductions by military, but international community blindly trusts the myths of military. Human rights organizations are either silent or their impotent response is taken as a silent support to state back atrocities in Balochistan.

It seems that international community is waiting for a major human tragedy of 21st century, otherwise to prove the Baloch case, that Enforced Disappearance and extra-judicial killings are a tool of Systematic Genocide in Balochistan, enough evidence is provided. Though atrocities of abductions on Baloch soil are countless, both space and time do not allow bringing everything in a single draft.

Nawab Bugti: ‘Riding the camel with reins in my hand’ lives in our hearts.

Articles : 

By Nawaz Bugti
<a href='http://balochwarna.com/features/articles.18/Pakistan039s-secret-dirty-war.html'>Pakistan's secret dirty war</a>

“It is better to die quickly in the mountain than slowly in bed.” These are words worth to pray by a mother for her child. “Rochay ta bay cho Akbara” The day you become like Akbar.

Nawab Muhammad Akbar Khan Bugti became legendary hero of every one in Balochistan. Today at 26th August, 2012 I feel that remembering the death of a national savior is in-fact celebrating his life for every moment he devoted for his nation. On the same day in 2006, some six years ago Nawab Bugti embraced martyrdom in Tharatani, the Baloch battle field after a fierce fight with the armies of a hypocrite state.

80 years old Baloch revolutionary warrior, leading his nation in a just fight against a nuclear monster and a military might was a nightmare for the enemy in his life. Notorious Chief of Punjabi Army, Pervaiz Musharaf often expressed his concerns about Nawab Muhammad Akbar Khan Bugti and used to threaten him publically in electronic media. Even after his death the cowards are still reluctant to reveal the circumstances of his last fight. Nothing is known about his comrades till date and inhuman armies tried to burry an ideology in a locked coffin but they were just ignorant.

Life of Baloch savior, his legacy and choice of death truly have become sources of inspiration for Baloch generations to come. Nawab Muhammad Akbar Khan Bugti is the heroic figure that preferred to die fighting and still fighting, holding his gun firmly against the oppressor, and planted seeds of the future in the fertile Baloch soil. He became “Sohail” – The star of hope in the heavens of people’s aspirations and desires, shower of blessing in burning hot deserts of disappointment.

The seeds of struggle planted by Nawab Muhammad Akbar Khan Bugti are now well germinated and bearing healthy stems of power, lush green leaves of hope and colorful flowers of dreams. After six years of his death, his legacy is a glowing beacon to all those who believe in the possibility of better world through struggle and sacrifice.

Today after six years of Nawab Bugti`s martyrdom his life is being celebrated not only in Balochistan but in every nook and corner of Baloch Diaspora. Entire Baloch nation sees the world through his perspective and took his glasses symbolically- which were presented by an official to media as the part of evidence of his assassination. A full fledge freedom movement is carried out by his followers.

There will appear a lot of write-ups about his struggle and legacy today, but this one is simply a tribute to a great leader with a greater cause.

Gimps of his Life and Legacy

“Came back to make my home in the middle of one of the world’s hottest and most inhospitable deserts among the most hospitable ,generous and quick-tempered people I`ve ever encountered, the Tigers of Balochistan”-Sylvia A. Matheson ( The Tigers of Balochistan )

Above lines of famous English writer, may explain the geography, weather, culture and people with whom Nawab Muhammad Akbar Khan Bugti belonged. Veteran Baloch leader was Chieftain of his tribe, well-educated and loved to promote education. When Assad, a poor guy of his tribe from working class (Lohar) secured his position in his intermediate, Nawab Bugti, at his own expenses, sent him for higher education to oxford. He was a good reader and managed to follow four books at a time.

Nawab Bugti was one of the great reformers of Baloch history who for the first time abolished class discrimination among his tribesman, and made sure that everyone is treated equally. In a tribal society it was one of his great achievements, when he successfully abolished institution of “Teehi-Molidi” – Slaves and Keeps. Nawab Bugti believed in the justice in time and managed it at his best in the inter-tribal affairs, which strengthened his tribe by resolving conflicts in time. The Bugti as a tribe were believed to be one of powerful tribes of Balochistan with lesser conflicts with each other.

He was one, who believed in discipline and never let anyone to cross the fine line between liberty and chaos, his exemplary disciplined behavior at March 17, 2005 is an inspiration when he was sitting calm and listening his folks about the aggression of enemy, while his house was under heavy artillery shelling. Religiously he was a liberal Muslim who adjourned his tribal sit-ins when there was a prayer call-Azan; on the other hand he generously donated his ancestral lands for Hindu and Sikh Temples too. He was extremely punctual, and locals used to adjust their watches at the time of his arrival to regular tribal sit-ins.

Though Nawab Muhammad Akbar Khan Bugti had a nice collection of the English and French literature, in his personal Library but he loved the Balochi Language and literature. He remembered a great part of poetry of famous Baloch poets Mast Tawakli, Jawansal Bugti, and Jam Durrakh. Ata Shad Baloch was also a good friend to him. Professor Ghulam Hussain Saba Dashtyari even denied the Pakistan’s highest civil award in protest against the martyrdom of Nawab Bugti.

Freedom Fight

Nawab Muhammad Akbar Khan Bugti was a Baloch National leader who never compromised his national interests and never failed his nation in even desperate times. He enjoyed the fame, being man of principles equally among friends and foes. He was fond of the poetic narratives of Baloch National attributes of bravery. As a person, he was not prepared to demand of others what he was not prepared to undertake himself, so at the age of 80 he went to mountains leading his nation in the freedom fight, he proved the Baloch proverb “Koh-ant Balochani Qalat” – Our Mountains are our fort.

He was really a great commander , his comrades tell that when in a gun fight his camel died , Nawab Sahab managed to walk on foot , while his leg was bleeding so badly that his shoe got filled of blood, he just put it off , emptied the pool of blood and again put it on. Though comrades offered him a ride on shoulders even in such predicament, he declined comrades’ offer, because he never wanted to let down morale of his comrades.

Once reciting the poetry of legendary Baloch warrior Balach Gorgej “Man gon Bazan Hancho Khanan – Chho Baanz gon Khawoti Walharan” – I will treat the enemies, as Falcons treat the Dove. No one knew the fact he will turn rebel to modern slavery and make his way to traditional Baloch Forts to fight against Oppressing Punjabi forces. When asked about the Balach Gorgej of the day, he raised his eye brow, and with a sparkle in his eyes he replied “Those who do not fear death, are all Balach Gorgej.” His vision was clear to struggle and sacrifice for the sake of generations. Once in a phone conversation talking to veteran Baloch leader Nawab Khair Bakhsh Khan Marri, he said “If we fail our nation now, we will be cursed for generations.”

Though in the beginning he believed in democratic arrangements and honorable pacts with newly born state but Punjabi armed forces of Pakistan never knew the importance of commitments or one can say that they never valued their words. By his half a century working experience with Punjabi regime, he learnt that there is no any future for Baloch Nation in Pakistan and those are the very last advice to resistance icons - Balach and Brahamdagh when he ordered both of them to flee from the point where he decide to wait the enemy for his last gun battle that lead to his martyrdom, he said to Balach and Brahamdagh: “we spoiled many years of our life, but I advise you both that, do not waste your time, because there is no way that Baloch can be part of Pakistan, continue the struggle for liberation after I am gone, and I see it soon.”

Baloch in their journey from Alepo to Alburz, never surrendered to any oppressor, maintained their rich culture and unique norms. It’s historically proven that Baloch can go to any extant if their ego and honor are questioned. British were quick learners; they learnt the historic lesson from their first expedition. After the Defeat of Kahan Fort, they knew the fact that to conquer Baloch by sword is impossible, and managed the state of affairs with extreme diplomacy known as Sandeman arrangement (Though Sandeman arrangements are also known as pacts of exploitation but they were never so shameless and arrogant). In their agreements with brave Baloch, they cautiously cared the Baloch code of ethics. But arrogant Punjabi is not that wise they forgot the lesson of their ex-masters and tried to enslave Baloch. Unethical armies shamelessly tried every aggression but failed.

Though Pakistan as a state was exploiting Baloch resources from day one but now in the name of development new plans of loot and plunder was drawn to exploit Baloch resources with the help of new Masters. Pakistan was preparing to accommodate war criminals of Bangladesh freedom movement (Biharis) in the Baloch land, which on the one hand would have been a new episode of occupation, while on the other hand this move would disastrously turn the population ratio against Baloch on their own soil. At the same the unethical Punjabi army captain had raped the Sindhi Lady Doctor who was working there to treat poor Balochs. The crook military Captain was pardoned by the then President of Pakistan dictator Musharraf even without an interrogation to the incident. Nawab Muhammad Akbar Khan Bugti could never be the part of spectators and rose to rebel and demanded freedom for his nation.

State tried her best to make the brave Baloch to surrender on her terms, but it was just an underestimation of ignorant forces. When asked about the possibility of his success against a monster Nawab Muhammad Akbar Khan Bugti replied “They are determined to eliminate me, but I am transferring my legacy to young generation, and it’s now youth who will continue the fight till absolute freedom”, reciting revolutionary poetry of Gul Khan Naseer “Phada Phada Warna Jangain”- Wake up, wake up O youth, its war.

The man with will and wits ever loved to live in charge of everything as he himself says in his unpublished poetry, “Hushtira Zwaran Dast Maharan-nain”- Riding the camel with reins in my hand. Once in the forum of his folks he said “Birth is a heavenly decision, but choice of death must remain with the man himself, its death which makes the difference.” Even at the age of 80 he successfully drawn the enemy forces to the battlefield of his own choice, and achieved desired results from his martyrdom. His noble death literally worked as a spur for Baloch freedom movement.

In the words of Ata Shad “Gon sinadaga dasht khanay phulla cha bo talania”, - Can you stop a flower of spreading fragrance by plucking it off? Nawab Muhammad Akbar Khan Bugti is still fighting, holding his gun firmly against the oppressor, and will fight till absolute liberty of motherland Balochistan. "No matter how hard they oppress Baloch, how brutal they can be, still his legend grows". The struggle will continue till victory. 

Monday, October 1, 2012

Flooding Maroons 500,000 in Balochistan; 2,000 Houses Destroyed

Flooding Maroons 500,000 in Balochistan; 2,000 Houses Destroy.

 

QUETTA: Flooding in the province of Balochistan has left at least half a million people marooned, besides destroying over 2,000 house, Chief Secretary of Balochistan Babar Yaqoob Fateh said on Saturday.
Torrential rains and flash floods in Naseerabad and Jaffarabad districts have caused damage, destroyed standing crops on thousands of acres completely washed away road network.
“Dera Allah Yar, Dera Murad Jamali, Sohbat pur, Manjopur, Manjoshori areas are still under two to six feet of water, increasing the plight of the thousands of families living in these areas,” he said while talking to reporters at the Provincial Disaster Management Authority’s office in Quetta.
Yaqoob said that he had contacted his counterpart in Sindh and asked him not to divert water from Jacobabad towards Balochistan as it would worsen the situation in the country’s largest province.
“We are in contact with the Sindh government to avoid more losses in Balochistan,” he said.
The provincial official said that losses caused by the flash floods and hill torrents in northern and southern Balochistan were so huge that the provincial government alone could not cope with the calamity.
"International humanitarian organisations, federal government and philanthropists should come forward and assist us in the relief and rehabilitation process," Babar said.
Expressing concern over the spread of water-borne diseases and scarcity of food and potable water, he said that provincial government was fighting the challenge by utilising all its available resources.
He said that PDMA, provincial government, Army and FC were engaged in the rescue and relief operation as six Army helicopters and 18 boats were shifting the flood-affected families to relief camps set up in the Naseerabad and Jaffarabd districts.

Balochistan being Talibanised, UNHRC told

By Murtaza Ali Shah

GENEVA: Balochistan’s unofficial representative to the United Nations Mehran Baloch has alleged that the restive province is being “Talibanised” by the establishment to further religious and ethnic divisions to weaken the nationalist and progressive forces.
Baloch was speaking at a seminar he organised here on Thursday at the Palais Des Nations, the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) headquarters, which was attended by a large number of human rights campaigners, NGOs and delegates from various countries.
At least three senior UNHRC representatives attended the seminar as observers but they did not take part in the discussion on Balochistan situation. The speakers included Tarek Fateh, a left-wing commentator from Canada, Dr Charles Graves, ex-Member of European Parliament (ex-MEP) Pablo Casaka, Zafar Baloch, Noordin Mengal and Baseer Naweed of the Asian Human Rights Commission.
Baloch said that UN Working Group on Involuntary Disappearances in its recent visit to the country had its work “extensively obstructed by the authorities, at time on the pretext of security and sometime there was no security for them”.
He alleged the working group members were told their visit was not necessary and “every trick was used to disrupt their work so that to hide the real nature of the atrocity that exists”.
Speaking on the spike in sectarian violence in the province, Baloch said: “The Talibanisation of Balochistan targets the most vulnerable sections of Baloch society, namely the women and religious minorities. The relentless killings of Hazara are a burning issue of our times and it exposes the true face of those who have forever promoted hatred on sectarian and ethnic lines to help their agenda of subjugating the masses.”
He said several militant organisations have established their foothold in the province under the guise of social welfare work. The other speakers raised the issue of involuntary disappearances and feared that thousands of people may have been killed as despite many requests the agencies were not responding as to what had happened to the lives of those they have allegedly picked up. They called on the government of Pakistan to halt military operation in some parts of Balochistan, especially Marri and Bugti areas.