Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

BLA have claimed responsibility for the blast in Quetta yesterday, according to them they targetted BMDA (Baloch Mutehhida Difah Army) which has been involved in Killing people (intellectuals, human right activists and journalists) who are anti army and Pakistan. I am not sure if these people are supported by Govt of Pakistan as lashkars (Razakars during bangladesh war??). Any how some of the ctivities of BMDA:

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2011/03/03/story_3-3-2011_pg7_7

**BMDA claims responsibility for killing of human rights activist

**
QUETTA: **The banned Baloch Mussallah Diffah Army (BMDA) claimed responsibility for the killing of human rights activist Naeem Sabir in Khuzdar. The group targets political opponents of the government, including journalists and other professionals. A BMDA spokesman, Mir Jang Baloch, calling from an unspecified location, said that his organisation had carried out the attack and vowed to continue such attacks in the future against those who are involved in targeted killings and torching government offices. He threatened the Baloch people against participating in the activities of the Baloch Student Organisation, Baloch Republican Party, Balochistan National Party and Baloch National Movement, otherwise they would meet the same fate.
**
staff report

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

According to tweets of some baloch's the recent attack was on naseer mengal's house (who is the chief of balochistan mutehidda difah army), according to them he is not on any government position but still he has security cover from FC.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

http://www.thefridaytimes.com/31122010/page5.shtmlAn intractable situationBalochistan constitutes roughly 40 to 43 percent of the land mass with only a 5 to 7 percent share in the population.** It has the richest mineral and natural resources in the country, yet, is the most impoverished area of Pakistan with the lowest literacy, health and infrastructure.** The province also happens to house one of the longest popular insurgent moments in history dating back more than, five decades.

From 1973 to 1978 roughly 60,000 Baloch tribesmen and militia faced-off against the Pakistani army. Iran, eager to quell any similar uprising in its bordering area, contributed its air-force and personnel to the Pakistani efforts and bombarded Baloch villages into submission. Bhutto’s ouster, via Zia’s military coup, forced a calm onto the situation as Zia launched into his One-Pakistan-through-Islam program. The Afghanistan war, the Iranian revolution and Zia’s policies made Balochistan an island of outsider activity. US and UN aid for Afghani refugees poured into the metropolitan areas. During the 1990s, the Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif governments did little for Balochistan and Baloch nationalist parties floundered in exile.

**After General Musharraf landed into power, he tried to foster new a relationship with Balochistan. Over the last decade, the Kachhi Canal, Mirani Dam, Gwadar Port, Makran Coastal Highway, Saindak Copper Project and Quetta Water Supply Scheme were announced by Islamabad. More than a 300 percent increase was made in the national budget for development programmes in Balochistan. Yet, all these things have failed to materialize and with the killing of Nawab Akbar Bhugtti and later of Marri, all hope for reconciliation is lost.

The present government in Balochistan lacks legitimacy as all Baloch nationalist parties’ boycotted 2008 elections in protest against an unannounced operation in Balochistan. According to author of bestselling *****The Way of the World, Ron Suskind, the current chief minister Nawab Aslam Raisani has links with intelligence agencies. The Baloch see him as an agent of the Pakistani establishment. **

**The Baloch Nationalist Movement (BNM) and the Baloch National Party (BNP) were once considered ‘moderates’ with leaders like Dr Abdul Hayee Baloch and Hasil Bizenjo. In recent years, Baloch nationalism in what is described as the “Balochistan belt” has silently but inevitably changed its direction from political activism to militant movement or active insurgency. The middle class that once denounced militancy has recently taken a very tough stance against the state of Pakistan and had turned hawkish. Now anyone who speaks of reconciliation with Islamabad or even provincial autonomy is seen as an “agent” of the intelligence bureaus.

Historically, the Pakistani establishment via its various intelligence agencies had played various Baloch tribes against each other. The intelligence officials stationed in Balochistan continue this policy of dividing the Baloch; however, its effectiveness has diminished. Across the province the younger generation has become completely radicalized and to them Balochistan is already an independent state. A visit to Balochistan University, Quetta, and Balochistan Engineering University, Khuzdar, confirms that the demand of “full autonomy” is widespread. Even the middle class Baloch will not settle on anything less than, “complete independence”. **

**Due to the highhanded techniques employed by Frontier Corps, which run a shadow government in Balochistan, strong militant nationalism has gained ground. The locus of militancy is in ‘Baloch’ districts such as Dera Bugti, Kohlu and Wadh (areas controlled by Mengals, Bugtis and Marris). However, anti-state sentiments are no longer confined to a specific area of Balochistan anymore.
**
Several analysts claim that the Pakistan military is in control, is ‘hyper active’, micro managing, and super sensitive about Balochistan. It regularly detains young Balochis from Lyari, Karachi, and allegedly indulges in human rights’ abuses and terror tactics. My research indicates that at least since 2009 for every non-Baloch killed in Balochistan, a Baloch is killed the next day. This pattern seems to indicate that the security establishment has decided to apply the ‘Swat Model’ to Balochistan by grossly misjudging the two insurgencies. Another terror device has been to throw Balochi activists from helicopters. Only recently two more mutilated bodies have been found in Mustang and Turbat.

*Demographic changes manufactured by Islamabad by encouraging Pashtuns to settle in Balochistan have created tensions between the Baloch and Pashtun communities within the province. The Frontier Corps has become a colonial force viewed by locals as responsible for killing Balochis. Incidentally, FC is largely composed of Pashtuns (and some Punjabis). It is creating additional friction within Balochistan where the Baloch for the first time feels a sense of animosity against the Pashtuns who had been living in Balochistan for generations. An intelligence insider who had previously been in-charge of Balochistan confirms the fact that Mahmood Khan Achakzai, a veteran Pashtun leader in Balochistan, holds a key to the future of Balochistan, but for the Baloch he has decided to ‘look the other way’.
**
Actions by the tribals and the military response in Balochistan can be understood within the context of the acrimonious center-province relationship in Pakistan. The rights of provinces, minorities, and individuals are negotiated in a deeply contested manner where the military power brokers have the final word. Given the lack of political space, aggrieved parties are finding no alternative except violent struggle. Foreign intervention has also been reported but the evidence for that is sketchy and unclear. However, Balochistan is a largely a domestic issue and requires a political solution. Pakistani state has created similar situations in urban Sindh, Waziristan in the past. It is time that the civil and military leadership took this issue seriously and devise a political agreement with the people of Balochistan to save the federation.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

http://www.thebalochhal.com/2010/03/ipi-the-baloch-perspective-by-sanaullah-baloch/

IPI: the Baloch perspective By Sanaullah Baloch

*BALOCHISTAN, the size of Texas and that accounts for 44 per cent of Pakistan and 16 per cent of Iran’s landmass, is a strategically important area.
*
*By virtue of its energy resources and its location, it is key to the energy supply to South Asia, including Pakistan. The country’s mounting energy crisis and the growing demand for energy security in the region have magnified Balochistan’s economic and strategic importance.
**Yet without addressing the grave political challenges in the province, Islamabad is pursuing an ambitious plan to import one billion cubic feet ***(bcf) of gas per day through the 2,100km-long Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) gas pipeline.
*
**Balochistan is the only potential land route for the proposed $1.2bn pipeline. A major part — some 1,500km — of the 2,100km-long conduit which will connect Iran’s Pars gas field to Pakistan’s main distribution system in Nawabshah, will cross Baloch territory in Iran and Pakistan.
**
Islamabad has been pursuing the IPI project since 1993. Initially, a memorandum of understanding was signed for the construction of an Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline, a project that India later wished to join. The project envisaged a 2,670km land pipeline with a 3,620 million cubic feet per day (mmcfd) gas transmission capacity.

Pakistan and Iran signed the agreement and an operational accord in Istanbul on March 17. However, it is not clear how these new agreements are different from the ones inked during President Asif Ali Zardari’s visit to Tehran in May last year, following which officials from the newly-formed Inter State Gas System (ISGS) quietly signed the controversial gas sale-purchase agreement in Istanbul.

**The policymakers in Islamabad need to take a very realistic approach towards energy security. Amongst the major issues is the seemingly endless political conflict in Balochistan, along with US concerns, high pricing and the threat posed by religious militants.
**
**If billions of dollars are invested in the pipeline before addressing these chronic issues, the whole project is bound to backfire. Islamabad has, as usual, committed a significant political blunder by overlooking the importance of Baloch consent on the proposed gas channel.
**
Baloch opposition to such a trans-national pipeline was voiced as far back as 2005 when veteran Baloch nationalist Akbar Khan Bugti said that “only the goodwill of the Baloch people can allow the proposed gas pipeline from Iran and Central Asia to India to pass through their soil”. He was killed by Pakistan’s security forces in August 2006.

**In June of that year, members of the treasury and the opposition benches in the Balochistan Assembly exhibited unprecedented unity and passed a resolution seeking royalty for the province in the proposed multi-billion dollar IPI gas pipeline project. Further, the assembly also demanded Balochistan’s representation in the IPI talks, free gas for adjacent populations, a 100 per cent job share and a major share in any royalty paid by India.
**
Currently, however, the proposed gas pipeline project does not envisage any economic or social benefits for Balochistan’s under-privileged population. The pipeline will be constructed by international companies that can use high-tech equipment, security will be provided by federal forces such as the Frontier Corps, which is a non-Baloch paramilitary force, and all the available jobs — including technical ones — will go to qualified and technically-sound people from other provinces, since they have the opportunities and the resources to attain high-quality education.

Furthermore, there is no constitutional or legal guarantee that royalty in any form, including security, jobs or gas, will be supplied to the people of Balochistan.
The Baloch people have not had encouraging experiences as regards Islamabad’s policies and promises. Despite having provided fuel to the national economy for years, the province has only 3.4 per cent of the country’s gas consumers — as opposed to Punjab’s 67 per cent, which produces only 4.7 per cent of the gas.
The controversial price accord also makes the project less feasible. According to this price accord, Pakistan will purchase Iranian gas at various prices; the lack of a fixed rate extends great leverage and benefit to Iran in terms of procuring a high price for the gas it exports.

Iran will sell gas to Pakistan for $7 per MMBtu ( one million British thermal unit) if the Japanese Crude Cocktail (JCC) price is $50 per barrel, and $9.4 per MMBtu and $13 per MMBtu if the JCC price touches $70 and $100 per barrel respectively. The price does not include infrastructure, security and other costs.

**The imported gas price would be 10 to 20 times more costly than the gas forcefully extracted from Balochistan and Sindh by the central government. Pakistan Petroleum Limited currently pays only 63 cents per MMBtu for Balochistan’s high heating-value gas.
**
However, those 63 cents go to the central government’s kitty and Balochistan receives only a 12.5 per cent royalty against the gas produced.
**The level of discrimination and exploitation of Baloch wealth can be gauged by these figures: Balochistan produces $1.4bn worth of gas annually but receives only $116m in royalties.Islamabad has always been short-sighted about its economic and political policies. The country’s over-centralised political system has resulted in constant political and economic conflicts between the centre and the provinces. Though the Baloch are not stakeholders in Pakistan’s internal and external affairs, including policy making, Islamabad cannot deny the fact that Balochistan represents 44 per cent of the country’s landmass and shares strategically significant coasts and border areas with the energy-rich Middle East, through Iran.
**
**Until there is a positive breakthrough in the Balochistan conflict, the ambitious IPI gas pipeline venture will remain a pipe dream.
**
**The writer is a former senator and research fellow at the Inter-Parliamentary Union, Geneva.
*
[email protected]

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Wow, someone has been really 'in touch' with all the tweets and (English) news articles/Op-Ed pieces vis-a-vis Baluchistan. :)

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

I consider that my responsibility, as I feel that Pakistani media is not doing justice to the Balochistan issue. Awareness needs to be created about the issue so as to the concerned people whoever they might be (military/civilian) will take the issue seriously and have it resolved on war footing. The war which spread from 1-2 tribes has already spread out to most of Baloch areas, and if its not controlled fast it could create another tragedy like 1971.

I feel that the international community is quiet for a reason and at some stage this issue might get international support, and when that happens Pakistan Army will try to negotiate under pressure/weak position. And at that time I dont see the Baloch negotiating with Pakistan, anything short of independence. There are a lot of international interests in Balochistan, which demands that the military treads carefully.

Pakistani government has given the military a lot of powers in Balochistan, although the issue is political. The government will have to take the realm of affairs in its controls if it really wants to resolve the issue.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

This is the opinion of Sana Baloch which was published in Dawn in May 2008, shortly after PPP came into power. Sadly there is no noticeable change in the policies of the government/military.

http://archives.dawn.com/2008/05/16/op.htm#3

Balochistan peace prospects

By Sanaullah Baloch
**
THE establishment in Pakistan has over the years ignored the advice of international agencies and human rights groups to exercise restraint in Balochistan.

The Brussels-based International Crisis Group (ICG) prepared two comprehensive reports on the provinces, urging Islamabad to stop using force and to initiate a dialogue on Balochistan’s political crisis. But all this had no impact on the powers that be.
**
After the Feb 18 elections, the PPP’s co-chairman, Asif Ali Zardari, tendered an informal apology for the injustices and excesses meted out to the Baloch. He also announced that an all-parties conference would be convened to start a comprehensive dialogue to end the crisis in Balochistan. His move was cautiously welcomed by the Baloch nationalist parties. They, however, insisted that consultation would only be held with the ruling coalition if it proved by its actions that it was in a position to overturn the establishment’s notorious polices of the past.

At present the province is going through a phase of hope and despair. Many believe that talks will repair the damage done. But others consider the peace offer as a tactical move by the establishment. An end to Balochistan’s bloodletting is certainly overdue. Earlier talks had failed because General Musharraf’s government wasn’t willing to negotiate on the issues that would diminish the establishment’s power over provincial matters.

According to Baloch leaders, the establishment is the key player in Balochistan. Without its willingness to relinquish its hold on the affairs of the province the Baloch will remain at odds with Islamabad.

Sardar Attaullah Mengal, a veteran Baloch politician, stated that “issues with regard to Balochistan are crystal clear”. It is no use quarrelling with the powerless Baloch about what they need. It is much more important to change the mindset of the powerful civil-military establishment.

Baloch nationalists have offered strong but clear terms for talks at the PPP-sponsored APC. The Jamhoori Watan Party has demanded that a murder case be registered against President Pervez Musharraf for the murder of Nawab Akbar Bugti and other Baloch, security forces be fully pulled back from Dera Bugti and other areas, the military operation be ended, the ‘missing’ be traced, displaced people be rehabilitated, cantonments in Sui be dismantled and all political prisoners be released. The Balochistan National Party and the National Party along with other groups have presented a similar list of confidence-building measures as conditions for talks.

Amongst the Baloch, the JWP, BNP and Marri tribe are the most aggrieved parties in the conflict. JWP’s top leader and veteran Baloch nationalist Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti and young Nawabzada Balach Marri lost their lives in cold-blooded operations. Mass displacement, killings, loss of property and disappearances have been reported from Dera Bugti and Kohlu districts. The BNP has suffered heavily on the political front. Its leader Sardar Akhtar Mengal was detained and kept in solitary confinement for 18 months. Activists disappeared, arbitrary arrests were made and property was destroyed.

It is generally recognised that the underlying differences between the Baloch and the establishment lie at the root of the unending crisis. The crisis of confidence between the Baloch and Islamabad hampers dialogue. The Baloch believe they have been robbed and betrayed by the establishment for the last 60 years. Hence the Baloch intelligentsia, political activists and the diaspora are reluctant to see their leadership sit across the table and negotiate with Islamabad without clear signs of a change in approach.

**The establishment must come forward and wholeheartedly support the PPP’s reconciliation efforts, demonstrating its willingness to grant political autonomy to the provinces and allowing experienced and neutral international think-tanks and experts to devise a strategy for conflict management to facilitate the mediation process. Thus alone can the people’s trust be restored and a dialogue be initiated.

The truth and reconciliation process has been tested in several places all over the world. It envisages conflict prevention, resolution and management. In Balochistan, the conflict prevention process was thwarted by the establishment in December 2005. As stated by the ICG in its 2006 report, “by choosing confrontation, the Musharraf government bears responsibility for the state of the conflict in Balochistan”.**

The key to peace lies in the cessation of hostilities and violent activities from both sides. This needs to be done through a formal process.

Unfortunately, the situation in Balochistan is frightening. The two sides have failed to reach any agreement on ending hostilities. As observed by NP leader, Mir Hasil Khan Bizenjo, “the military and paramilitary troops are still active, their intelligence networks are still operational and are hounding people struggling for their rights”. Nawabzada Jamil Akbar Khan Bugti, son of late Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti, has also denied reports of withdrawal of security forces from Dera Bugti. He reported an attack by security forces in Dera Bugti just some days ago claiming that his tribesmen were in detention and were being tortured.

The PPP-led committee that has been set up must avoid following the futile road taken by the parliamentary committee on Balochistan created earlier. The bulk of its members were irrelevant and their presence complicated the political process. The process of reconciliation and conflict resolution must now be exclusive, involving real stakeholders and aggrieved parties from both sides so that talks can be held in depth.
**
The Baloch parties and fighters must be consulted exclusively to get it to nominate representatives to negotiate on political, economic, social and cultural issues. The establishment must be a party to the talks through the National Security Council.True Baloch nationalists, like a majority of pro-democracy parties in Pakistan, do not recognise the NSC as a democratic body, but unfortunately the NSC is the real establishment, comprising the civil-military elite. In any future talks, the NSC must be a part of the dialogue process to represent the establishment to address the issue of political decentralisation with reference to Balochistan. The third and important element should be the ruling coalition.**

The success of the APC will depend on the good faith of the powerful — but unfriendly — establishment, whose policy dilemma has led to ceaseless centre-province confrontation.

The government must come up with a generous formula of granting substantial autonomy to the region. Otherwise, futile deliberations will further multiply political frustrations. ](http://archives.dawn.com/2008/05/16/op.htm#3)

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2011\12\12\story_12-12-2011_pg3_2

**COMMENT: Constitutional limits and fundamental rights? *—Sana Baloch


**

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/images/2011/12/12/20111212_31.jpg

Rather than counselling and redressing their grievances, the less harmful moderate Baloch activists are simply executed extra-judicially.*

The distasteful feature of Pakistani polity and disrespect for constitutional rights can easily be précised by a careful examination of the worsening human rights violations of non-core groups by dominant institutions.

Violation of human rights is a global phenomenon. The difference is one of degree. The violation of the rights of certain non-core groups by dominant security establishment is a permanent feature of Pakistani society, where in non-core group areas such as Balochistan,** the violations of human rights are towering with mounting cases of enforced disappearances, a kill and dump policy, political assignations, targeted killings and systematic deprivation of socio-economic development — a common but institutionalised trend.**

**Despite a proclaimed independent judiciary, these violations are taking place under the shields of ‘uniform’ and ‘authority’, not to mention the fact that they are conducted with deliberate ‘negligence’ and ‘silence’ of national and domestic courts. **

In October 2011, Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, during his visit to Quetta, the capital city of the unfortunate Balochistan province, said that he would “soon constitute a larger bench on the unrest and violation of fundamental human rights in Balochistan to collect evidence and ascertains reasons behind the violation of fundamental human rights in the province”.

**No doubt the Supreme Court’s (SC’s) larger bench in Karachi took plausible measures and decisions, but till date, there has not been any indication or initiation regarding the SC’s larger bench on human rights violations in Balochistan. **

Mr Chief Justice, at the same occasion, categorically and unequivocally voiced that “we will go to any extent to safeguard the rights of the people”.

Recently, on December 9, 2011, the CJP determinedly reiterated that the singular duty of the apex court was not only to enforce the freedom of life of the people, but also to ensure that complete quality of life was provided to the citizens of Pakistan.

Elaborating his views, the CJP said, “The constitution has set limits for every institution, whether it is parliament, the executive or the judiciary, and by adhering to the dictates of the constitution, the nation can achieve political stability, economic development and attain rightful and honourable place among the nations of the world.”

He said that fundamental rights had so much importance that under Article 8, even laws made inconsistent with or in derogation of fundamental rights could be declared as void. Theoretically, Pakistan’s constitution does talk about supreme civil liberties and guarantees; it empowers the apex court under articles 184, 187 and 190 to take cognisance in a variety of situations to enforce fundamental rights and do substantive justice. But in practice, none of these written guarantees are translated into practice to safeguard the rights of the oppressed.

Despite Himalayan assurances and well-versed statements of Pakistan’s top executive, the CJP, and repeated appeals of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), scores of mutilated bodies of marginalised Baloch activists are surfacing frequently.

In a statement issued on Friday, which was marked as the International Human Rights Day, expressing solidarity with the people of Balochistan and in support of their aspirations to realise their rights, the HRCP reiterated its grave distress at the absence of adequate measures to resolve lingering issues of human rights violations in the province.

**The HRCP statement states, “It is a matter of grave alarm that 107 new cases of enforced disappearances have been reported in Balochistan in 2011, and the ‘missing persons’ are increasingly turning up dead. Bodies of 225 ‘missing persons’ have been recovered from various parts of the province since July 2010. It is scandalous that not a single person has been held accountable for these disappearances and killings.”

In fact, the traumatised, voiceless, unrepresented and helpless people of Balochistan are tirelessly gazing towards Pakistan’s SC, international organisations and human rights champions. But to no avail.

Pakistan is a multi-ethnic country and going through multifaceted crises and conflicts, such as fighting with extreme religious groups in FATA and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, sectarian radicals in Punjab and Sindh and pro-self-rule Baloch movement in Balochistan, but there is evident inconsistency with regards to dealing with these dynamics. **

**The security apparatus seems very harsh and intolerable towards the Baloch people. Even though Baloch reprisals towards security forces is not as harmful and damaging as the Taliban and radical groups, the Baloch activists are facing extreme treatment — a trend that demands greater and careful understanding of Pakistan’s ethnically structured institutions and their subjective policies. **

**During the early days of the Swat operation, a few cases of ‘kill and dump’ of suspected Taliban combatants were reported, but suddenly this policy was confronted by sizable Pashtun policy-makers and military officials. The policy of ‘kill and dump’ was quickly replaced by Sabawoon: a new dawn for children in the Swat Valley — the UNICEF-funded and Pakistan Army-administered school that provides free religious education and psychiatric counselling to a large number of Taliban combatants, including trained suicides, to reintegrate them in society. However, in Balochistan’s case, the inhuman policy of collective punishment is seen to continue uninterrupted.

Since Balochistan is voiceless in Pakistan’s policy and decision-making corridors, the destiny of the Baloch political activists is bleak. Rather than counselling and redressing their grievances, the less harmful moderate Baloch activists are simply extra-judicially executed for their simple crime of disagreement with Pakistan’s colonial, discriminatory and exploitative policies.**

The security establishment in Balochistan is operating like an outdated tribal entity that is pursuing a policy of an eye for an eye by killing and dumping political activists for the acts committed by militants.

The Gestapo-like modus ope***** is only being committed against the Baloch people. **A careful examination of cases revealed that in Balochistan, a multi-ethnic province, 300 cases of ‘kill and dump’ were recorded in a period of 12 months. All victims were ethnic Baloch — political activists, professionals and journalists — a massive loss for a community that is horribly discriminated against, and has a very small educated and moderate class. **

**The empirical evidence and carefully documented national and international human rights reports raise serious concerns over a ‘slow-motion’ wipeout of moderate activists in the province. **

In today’s world, multi-ethnic states are the norm. However, dominant cultures in countries around the world, particularly in developing countries, still seek to impose their rule and identity on other groups with whom they share a territory.

Attempts to impose uniculturalism in multi-ethnic environments often come at the expense of minority rights. To avoid marginalisation, the minorities often intensify their efforts to preserve and protect their identity. The hardening of opposing forces –assimilation on the one hand and preservation of minority identity on the other — can cause increased intolerance, and in the worst cases, armed ethnic conflict. In such cases and in order to prevent escalation, the protection and promotion of minority rights becomes essential.

In fact, good governance plays a vital role in involving non-core groups (ethnic minorities) in societies and protecting their rights and interests. Through recognition, dialogue, and participation, all the citizens of a diverse society can form a greater understanding of one another’s concerns. Educational institutes and the media have important roles to play in this regard, as do political representatives and community leaders.

State authorities need to ensure that ethnic minorities enjoy the fundamental right to equality, both in written legislation and in society at large. The roles of the local government, civic organisations and NGOs are important in this respect. Police, prosecutors and judges need to be more aware of what constitutes racial discrimination and racially motivated crimes, and in some cases, changing the composition of the security structure to better reflect the multi-ethnic communities they serve may be appropriate.

The writer is a former Senator who resigned in 2008 against systematic discrimination and continued military operation in Balochistan. He can be reached at [email protected]
*

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

http://dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2012\01\02\story_2-1-2012_pg3_2ANALYSIS: Fundamental rights violations in Balochistan —Sheikh Asad RahmanIf the recommendations of the Hamoodur Rehman Commission had been implemented and responsible military and civilian officials duly held accountable, tried in courts and punished, citizens in Balochistan would not be facing genocide today.

Fundamental and human rights violations take place every day in Balochistan. In the past year over 300 mutilated bullet-riddled bodies of Baloch political leaders, workers, activists, students, teachers, lower grade public servants, have been dumped at desolate places or roadsides. Sectarian violence, especially targeting the Hazara Shia community (hitherto unknown in Balochistan and only in the past three years), and ethnic violence has seen an unprecedented rise. Most of these bodies are of missing persons (Baloch sources claim over 1,300 missing) who had been abducted by the perpetrators years ago and some recently. The families of the missing persons have been demonstrating, rallying in front of the Press Clubs of Quetta and even Islamabad trying to secure some information about their whereabouts but to no avail. Hundreds of cases are pending in the Balochistan High Court but no perpetrator has so far been identified leave alone docked.

**In the past three years there have been credible fact-finding reports by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) and Asian Human Rights Watch (AHRW) pointing to actions of the security agencies in the perpetuation of this violence that can be termed crimes against humanity and violation of constitutionally mandated fundamental rights. There are eyewitnesses in most cases of abduction but they are unwilling to expose themselves to a very real threat to their lives. The police surgeon, Dr Baqir Shah, whose forensic examination pointed to unwarranted shooting and killing of five unarmed foreigners by Frontier Corps (FC) soldiers in the Kharotabad incident, was shot dead the other day by unknown assailants. Since an impartial investigation into his murder is unlikely as in so many other cases, this murder will also remain unsolved like the hundreds others. **

Balochistan’s governor and chief minister have publicly declared that the FC is running a parallel government not answerable to the civilian government and answers only to GHQ. To clarify the status of the FC, it is a paramilitary organisation, ostensibly reporting to the provincial government where it is acting in aid of civil power but practically being led by serving army officers who report directly to GHQ, where the officers’ loyalties lie. Considering the prime minister’s assertions on the floor of the National Assembly of a state within a state, the provincial chief minister’s and governor’s statements reinforce the prime minister’s assertion. The question, therefore, arises how is it possible for a security state to exist within a constitutional and democratic state? For understanding this we need to go to the root cause; the basic law of the land that defines the people’s fundamental rights and parameters of the institutions.

**Article 245: Functions of Armed Forces reads: “(1) The armed forces shall, under the directions of the federal government, defend Pakistan against external aggression or threat of war, and, subject to law, act in aid of civil power when called upon to do so. (2) The validity of any direction issued by the federal government under clause (1) shall not be called in question in any court. (3) A high court shall not exercise any jurisdiction under Article 199 in relation to any area in which the armed forces of Pakistan are, for the time being, acting in aid of civil power in pursuance of Article 245: Provided that this clause shall not be deemed to affect the jurisdiction of the high court in respect of any proceeding pending immediately before the day on which the armed forces start acting in aid of civil power. (4) Any proceeding in relation to an area referred to in clause (3) instituted on or after the day the armed forces start acting in aid of civil power and pending in any high court shall remain suspended for the period during which the armed forces are so acting.”
**
In simple parlance this means no action of the armed forces acting in aid of civil power can be challenged in any high court while clause (2) says clearly that no court, even the Supreme Court, can question the federal government’s calling the armed forces in aid of civil power.

This unbridled and carte blanche authority without any checks, balances or accountability leads to the violation of the following fundamental rights. Article 9: Security of Person reads: “No person shall be deprived of life or liberties save in accordance with law.” Article 10 reads: “Safeguards as to arrest and detention. (1) No person who is arrested shall be detained in custody without being informed, as soon as may be, of the grounds for such arrest, nor shall he be denied the right to consult and be defended by a legal practitioner of his choice. (2) Every person who is arrested and detained in custody shall be produced before a magistrate within a period of 24 hours of such arrest, excluding the time necessary for the journey from the place of arrest to the court of the nearest magistrate, and no such person shall be detained in custody beyond the said period without the authority of a magistrate. (3) Nothing in clauses (1) and (2) shall apply to any person who is arrested or detained under any law providing for preventive detention. (4) No law providing for preventive detention shall be made except to deal with persons acting in a manner prejudicial to the integrity, security or defence of Pakistan or any part thereof, or external affairs of Pakistan, or public order, or the maintenance of supplies or services, and no such law shall authorise the detention of a person for a period exceeding three months unless the appropriate Review Board has, after affording him an opportunity of being heard in person, reviewed his case and reported, before the expiration of the said period, that there is, in its opinion, sufficient cause for such detention, and, if the detention is continued after the said period of three months, unless the appropriate Review Board has reviewed his case and reported, before the expiration of each period of three months, that there is, in its opinion, sufficient cause for such detention. “

Article 10A: Right to fair trial reads: “For the determination of his civil rights and obligations or in any criminal charge against him a person shall be entitled to a fair trial and due process.” Article 14: Inviolability of dignity of man, etc, reads: “(1) The dignity of man and, subject to law, the privacy of home, shall be inviolable; (2) No person shall be subjected to torture for the purpose of extracting evidence.”

It is, therefore, imperative for parliament to review articles and clauses that allow the violation of fundamental rights in peace time leave alone in an emergency. Parliament must have oversight over the actions of the armed forces and the superior judiciary, the Supreme Court and the high courts, need to be empowered to hold to account gross fundamental and human rights violations allegedly committed by the armed forces. If the recommendations of the Hamoodur Rehman Commission had been implemented and responsible military and civilian officials duly held accountable, tried in courts and punished, citizens in Balochistan would not be facing genocide today.

The writer is Director Programmes Sungi Development Foundation. He can be reached at [EMAIL=“[email protected]”][email protected]

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

All these long articles by indian paid Balochs sitting in foreign countries regarding human right violations in Balochistan, but nobody talks about the systematic genocide committed by indian backed hindu baloch terrorist organizations like BLA of settlers in Balochistan.

Just look at this incident, the hindu baloch BLA has admitted to doing the blast and killing 16 innocent people but none of the munafiqs (including those sitting with their families safely in other parts of pakistan and talking so gallantly about baloch hospitality and how great balochs are) have the balls to call this wrong........all these hypocrites can do is talk about Balochistan rights, nobody cares about the wrongs of these terrorist baloch organizations.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Do you know what the target of that blast was according to the baloch?

Please answer a few questions, do you see any wide ranging debate about balochistan in the rest of Pakistan? For gods sake most of us don't even know that balochistan exists. Agreed some settlers were killed in this war, what about the riots that took place in Karachi the previous year? Why was the reaction of army different in both occasions? For each settler killed the military killed More people. The government can talk to taleban who have killed thousands of people but thy cannot talk to baloch? Aren't all these things hypocritical?

We already know the governments view through Rahman Malik I'll be presenting the other side as well so as to see the picture from both sides.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

So you want another military operation in Karachi? :hmmm:

Btw, I am against military operations especially in Pakistan where the army has no formal counterinsurgency training. Army should only be deployed on a goal based time deadline to empower the local forces and increase their capabilities. But, you also have to admit that the reaction of Pakistan was different at least in the media when collateral damage happened in karachi vs. in balochistan / drone attacks. It seems the latter do get a big pass when the rule of law should be the same for all.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

No I am against operations anywhere in the country, that's not a solution for resolving political issues. I am all for addressing the concerns of smaller provinces on a permanent basis so as to reduce the chances for similar situations to arise in the future. When politicians hand over the affairs of the land to the army problems crop up thats exactly whats happening in Balochistan.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

So, do you think PTI would end the current quota system and instead implement a system where people are inducted where the jobs are for jobs that aren't extremely technical? I think the current quota system fueled what happened in karachi and now what is happening in balochistan if balochis are not been given jobs they can do, so they own the development process. I still think that are going the wrong way by killing "non-balochi" doctors, engineers and teachers etc as that only sets balochis further back.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

If you look at Pakistani television channels, newspapers and journals, everywhere you will see "Balochs crushed" etc. It has become "à la mode" to talk about the plight of the Balochs, in fact no one speaks about the plight of other ethnicities living in Balochistan. And mind you, at least 10,000 settlers have been killed in Balochistan. In 2010 alone there were about 300 murders in Quetta alone leaving aside interior Balochistan. What about the 100,000 families who had to migrate. The trouble is that you guys only want to see things through your glasses. Have you any idea about how much bhatta BLA takes from mine owners in Mach and nearby areas ?

People try to support terrorists like BLA by trying to take cover under the Baloch plight, but the two are entirely different things. Anyone who supports these indian-backed dogs should be shot.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Well I dont know on which media you see the news of balochistan on? There is a stark difference in the coverage given to the deaths all over Pakistan and that in Balochistan. If 10000 settlers have been killed in balochistan, please furnish proof for that.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Please open the Quetta edition of newspapers from 2007-2010. I am not sure if they are available online or not. You can ask ANY local just about Quetta, leave aside the whole of Balochistan. I was living in Quetta for about three months. And daily there were 3-5 target killings. So basically in three month, around 500 people were killed.

Do you really think that the military establishment is taking such action just to avenge the death of a couple of dozen of settlers ? I know at least 10 people personally who were killed in target killing in may-july 2010 alone including two doctors, three professors, students and workers in Quetta alone. These were people I knew personally. Mind you, in interior Balochistan like Qalat and Khuzdar the media cannot even dare report these killings as BLA is very strong there. Please wake up and smell the coffee........the azab in Balochistan is very much justified and can't you see the difference in tone of these indian-backed baloch sardars ever since the state has started crushing BLA ?

Waise by the way, what's the proof that you have? statements by racist Baloch sardars, biased media articles by indian-paid Balochs sitting in London and New York ?

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

As far as the coverage of the Baloch issue is concerned from Pakistani media…

Chiltan salma jafar

*Independent thinker, consultant, researcher, writer; Pashtun Chauvinist, always shouting Rights-of-Balochistan; my beautiful land!
*

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

There is no independent reporting on the issue, I dont know even if Rahman Malik can answer how many settlers have been killed in Balochistan.

As far as the killing of Baloch are concerned, three target killings have already been carried out in the first three days of 2012 and there's no reporting of that in our media. I havent read about the killing of settlers in a long time now.

Rahman Malik has announced a commission to probe Quetta bombing, why no commission on the killing of Dr Baqar Shah?

Although I was not directly affected, but when Americans were carrying out drone attacks in FATA it used create mixed feelings of hatred towards the Americans. Now consider yourself in the shoes of the baloch, they are receiving the dead bodies of their people almost every day, how do you expect them to retaliate or what kind of feelings they should harbour against the rest of pakistan?

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

They can keep on harboring whatever feelings they want towards Pakistan. But murdering innocent people is wrong, pure and simple. They have had their field day, killing settlers, blowing up electricity pylons, not letting the govt. develop roads and all with complete support from the local baloch government and India and CIA help. Despite trying their ass best to breakaway Pakistan and with complete impunity of murdering innocent people (please tell me one BLA killer ever apprehended), yet the pakistani military successfully crushed these meer jaffars. Now they want to talk because the head of the snake has been crushed. Just wait and you will see these same sardars begging the Pakistani state to forgive their crimes.