Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

I personally think it is way to late to save Balochistan. It is only the right of the Baloch to determine their own future. People are noticing too late. The youth, the future of Balochistan no longer see Pakistan as their future. We can sit and talk with India, MQM, TTP but the Baloch are seen as too far down the ladder. The Army does not take this revolt seriously. They forget the Baloch are a warrior race and probably will never give up their struggle. Musharaf must be punished for his murder of Bugti. That could help win back some trust but that might have no affect too.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

It is never too late .
If you can do something to transfer the power to the representatives of Baluchistan, The matter can become better.
At the moment ,Establishment is holding all powers .

How sad to read this but we still love you Balochs and we love you Baluchistanhttp://external.ak.fbcdn.net/safe_image.php?d=AQBOPg_lEzY0QK-4&w=90&h=90&url=http%3A%2F%2Fblogs.tribune.com.pk%2Fapplication%2F..%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2012%2F02%2F10098-foot-1328259721-397-160x120.jpgWelcome to the war in Balochistan
blogs.tribune.com.pkJournalists were discouraged to report on Balochistan. But we need to realise that it is our new, deadly war front.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Don't dramatize it that much. MQM and TTP did get operations against them and in fact, MQM was severly beaten back with collateral damage in BB's second tenure. And please don't bring in the taliban example, since first of all afghanistan is not a territory of the US and secondly, US forces are still staying and nothing has been given away yet.

Btw, bugti's tribesmen / militiamen were firing rockets at Pakistani security forces and destroying sui pipelines, so on what ground would you prosecute musharraf? In that case, be prepared to prosecute people for killing MQM or TTP walas etc.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

U.S. House meeting on Feb. 8 attracts Baloch, friends nationwide

**A number of pro-Balochistan activists from all over the nation will be converging on the U.S. capitol this week.
**
**“Hero of Balochistan” Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-CA 46th District, has convened a meeting of the Oversight and Investigations sub-committee of the House Foreign Relations Committee at 2200 Rayburn House Office Building at the U.S. capitol on Wednesday February 8, 2012.
**
**Since July 2010, Balochistan has been is in the grip of a genocidal situation where 350 political activists were forcibly disappeared, killed execution style and their bodies dumped in the wilderness by Pakistan army, Frontier Corps, Military Intelligence and Inter-Services Intelligence.
**
**Those who will present their papers before the subcommittee include Lt. Colonel (Retd) Ralph Peters, who is widely respected among the Baloch Diaspora as an advocate of Balochistan’s freedom; Georgetown University Asst. Professor C. Christine Fair, who belongs to a group of Pakistan-friendly scholars who believe ties with Islamabad are indispensable for U.S.; and Pakistan director of Human Rights Watch, Ali Daniyal Hasan.
**
“I wished Baloch representatives in U.S.A. were invited,” said Dr. Nazir Bhatti, president of Pakistan Christian Congress.
**Influential Balochistan voices will be in attendance.
**
**A leader of the American Friends of Balochistan, Laurie Deamer, has indicated her intention to attend the meeting.
**
**Deamer, who belongs to a well-respected family from Lancaster area, is daughter of retired U.S. military man Ray Deamer.
**
**The A.F.B. has been in touch with Rep. Rohrabacher office and has informed him about the key players in Balochistan, who include “Baloch Nelson Mandela” Sardar Akhtar Mengal of the Balochistan National Party; “Pride of Mekran” Senator Dr. Malik Baloch of the National Party; Brahumdagh Bugti, president of the Baloch Republican Party and chief of the militant Baloch Republican Army; Khan of Kalat Mir Suleman Daud Ahmadzai, whose family ruled over the tribal confederacy in Balochistan for multiple generations; Mehran Baluch, who has been raising a voice for Balochistan at the U.N. Human Rights Council, Geneva; and Dr. Jumma Marri of the Baloch Unity Moscow and son of former guerilla leader Mir Hazar Khan Ramkhani.
**
**Militant outfits such as Sattar Baloch’s Baloch National Liberation Front, Hyrbyair Marri’s Baloch Liberation Army; and Dr. Allah Nazar’s Baloch Liberation Front also have some pockets of support.
**
Dr. Wahid Baloch, president of the Baloch Society of North America – one of the first organizations to lobby for Balochistan --, is also likely to attend the meeting. Dr. Baloch has met Vice President Joe Biden and late senator Ted Kennedy, among other top U.S. politicians, to apprise them about the situation in Balochistan.
“I will do my best to be there,” Dr. Baloch said on phone from Jacksonville, Fla., Saturday night.

**Former Balochistan excise and taxation minister and Hindu businessman Dr. Tara Chand and Razzak Baloch, who are the new U.S.A. president and general secretary of the B.N.P., have been requested by Sardar Mengal to attend the briefing.
**
The two leaders will be arriving from Florida where Dr. Chand has a chain of motels.

Akram Baloch, who contested the 2008 elections as an independent candidate and has also joined the B.N.P., told this correspondent on phone from Philadelphia, he will also come to DC.

The bloody situation in Balochistan has been further compounded as two militant outfits, Nazar’s B.L.F. and Marri’s B.L.A., are also committing crimes against humanity by targeting pro-democracy political activists and unarmed civilians, especially Punjabi settlers, according to human rights groups.
Other than Rohrabacher, Rep Louie Gohmert, a Republican from Texas, has publicly called for independence of Balochistan for ensuring NATO’s political victory in Afghanistan. He too is considered to be a “Hero of Balochistan.”

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Very strong remarks by the court today in the Domki killings, a justice claimed that Balochistan is the soul of Pakistan, and if we lose the soul we will lose the country. CJ has asked the relevant authorities to arrest the killers within 4 days (how ever influential they might be). I dont think anything will happen in these 4 days, but lets see.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Domki killings: SC orders arrest of culprits by February 10

By Azam Khan / Web Desk
Published: February 6, 2012

http://i1.tribune.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/332377-DomkikillingsKarachiAFP-1328520384-322-640x480.jpg

CJ orders Inspector General of Police (IG) Sindh Mushtaq Shah appear in person during the next hearing. PHOTO: AFP/FILE

****ISLAMABAD: **The Supreme Court of Pakistan on Monday ordered that the culprits behind the murder of MPA Mir Balochistan Bakhtiar Domki’s wife and daughter be arrested by February 10.
**
Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry had taken a suo motu notice of the killings on Sunday.

**The court termed the case as “one of the most sensitive cases in the country”.
**
Hearing a petition filed earlier to the court by the Balochistan High Court Bar during the same hearing, the court told Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and Military Intelligence (MI) to submit a comprehensive report about the security situation of the province within the given deadline.

The court demanded that the ISI and MI that the report should not only entail the findings of the missing persons’ case and incidents of target killing.

Chaudhry also ordered Inspector General of Police (IG) Sindh Mushtaq Shah to appear in person during the next hearing.

IG Shah told the court that the investigations are underway and said that the police feared that personal enmity could be behind the incident.

The chief justice remarked that the killings cannot be the result of an enmity.

Shah also said that the family members were not giving any statement on the incident and that the only survivor of the attack – the maid – has refused to record her statement.

The Supreme Court told IG Shah that it was the duty of the agencies to determine the cause of the attack.

IG Shah told the court that President Asif Ali Zardari phoned him twice to ask about the progress of the case.

The chief justice expressed dissatisfaction over the progress of the investigations.

Attorney General Maulvi Anwarul Haq prayed to the court that an extension should be given in the case, on which the court said that the investigations should have been compiled “within 24 hours”, given the sensitivity of the case.

The chief justice remarked that the ISI and MI should work together in order to bring out the people responsible for the attack. CJ Chaudhry also said that the case has its “repercussions” as seen by a three-day shutter-down strike throughout Balochistan.

**During the hearing, Chief Justice Chaudhry said that the court was concerned about the law and order situation in Balochistan.

Justice Khilji Arif Hussain remarked that Balochistan is the “soul of Pakistan” and that Pakistan could not afford to lose it.**

Domki’s wife, daughter and driver were gunned down early morning on January 31 near the Gizri Bridge in Clifton.

The victims were travelling in their black Toyota Mark II car (ANR-353) when the killers reportedly intercepted them and shot them dead at point-blank range.

The deceased were also related to Baloch Republican Party (BRP) chief Baramdagh Bugti.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

This CJ and all four SC judges till last year were came on quota of Baluchistan and all of them are Punjabi . This is great example ,How we care about their rights .

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

^ CJ was born in Balochistan (Balochistani) so should he have gone for Punjab’s domicile? This is not an issue that you have raised!

Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry was born on 12 December 1948 in Quetta, Balochistan Province, Pakistan. Iftikhar Chaudhry’s forefathers belong to a City known as Jalandhar in the state of Punjab, India. Chaudhry belongs to Arain clan,his father, Chaudhry Jan Muhammad,a police officer, migrated from India at partition to a village in Faisalabad District and then went to Quetta, Balochistanduring partition in 1947.He has spent all his life in Quetta and moved to Islamabad, when he was elevated judge of Supreme Court of Pakistan in the year 2000.Chaudhry has three brothers who are settled abroad and he is second eldest child of his parents.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

I don't know about his father but I can tell you about another CJ , Mr Javed Iqbal , Whose father was a DSP and during his posting at Quetta ,He obtained domicile and so the jobs for his all sons even his killer.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

I am not sure about the situation of Javed Iqbal but I know of a family (very very close relatives) whose children have Balochistan, Sindh and Punjab's domiciles because he was in railways and was posted in different areas during his job's tenure and he was himself a Punjabi.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

This is just a way to grab rights .
After getting the jobs they again settle in Punjab but use this domicile as their hertage .

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

We cannot say anything unless there is proof of that, there are many people who get posted throughout the country during their job tenure. At some stage you have to leave your province and go to islamabad for higher posts, as far as CJ is concerned he has spent most of his life in Balochistan and he went to Islamabad when he was posted in the SC. If someone has a proof of any malpractice he should go to court, otherwise its just a speculation. This is a non issue, there's nothing wrong if Punjabis go to other provinces (for jobs) and Sindhis/balochis go to Punjab or KP.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Chickens coming home to roost?

http://www.dawn.com/2012/02/06/us-congressional-hearing-may-spell-trouble-for-pakistan.html

US Congressional hearing may spell trouble for Pakistan

While some officials from the government and non-governmental organisations have only expressed concern over the situation, other individuals, including former army soldiers, State department officials and members of the US Congress, have now begun to publicly assert support for an independent Balochistan. —Photo by Reuters

**The United States (US) Committee on Foreign Affairs is set to convene acongressional hearing on Wednesday (February 8), for an exclusive discussion on Balochistan.

**The extraordinary event has generated great interest among followers of Pakistan-US relations, as the allies’ mutual relationship seems to be deteriorating. The powerful House of Representatives committee oversees America’s foreign assistance programs and experts believe it can recommend halting US assistance to Pakistan over human rights violation in Balochistan.

**Calls for ‘independence’

While Islamabad has strictly treated Balochistan as an internal matter, the debate on such a divisive topic by the powerful committee has highlighted the level of American interest in Balochistan and its support, if any, for the nationalist movement.** On its part, Pakistan has kept Washington at arm’s length on the Balochistan issue, by refusing to grant it permission to open a consulate in Quetta.

**A Republican Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, who recently co-authored an article with Congressman Louie Gohmert expressing support for an independent Balochistan, will chair the hearing.

****“Perhaps we should even consider support for a Balochistan carved out of Pakistan to diminish radical power there (in Pakistan),” Rohrabacher wrote in his piece.

****According to Asia-Pacific Reporting Blog, “it is expected that the hearing will tackle issues related to whether or not the US Congress should tie human rights issues in Balochistan to Pakistani aid.”

****Witness box
**
Another area of interest is of the controversial witnesses who will testify before the committee. The three-member panel comprises of defence analyst Ralph Peters, Georgetown assistant professor, C. Christine Fair and Ali Dayan Hasan, Pakistan Director of the Human Rights Watch.

Ironically, the panel on Balochistan does not include a Baloch representative, an issue which has disappointed the Baloch diaspora in the United States, who fear the misinterpretation of their stance by people they view as unfamiliar with the Baloch conflict.

One of the witnesses, Ralph Peters, attracted scathing criticism by right-wing Pakistani strategists in June 2006, when his article Blood Borders](http://www.armedforcesjournal.com/2006/06/1833899) was published in the Armed Forces Journal](http://www.armedforcesjournal.com/) with a map of Free Balochistan. Peters, 59, a former US army officer, is expected to support in his testimony the idea of an independent Balochistan comprising of the Balochistan provinces in Pakistan and Iran and parts of Afghanistan.

On the other hand, Dr Christine Fair is known as a passionate supporter of Pakistan with an anti-India stance. The Pakistani media quoted Dr Fair in March 2009, for allegedly linking India with the Baloch insurgency. She was reportedly questioned the role of the Indian consulates in Afghanistan and Iran.

“Having visited the Indian mission in Zahedan,” she told a roundtable organised by the Foreign Affairs magazine, “I can assure you they (Indians) are not issuing visas as their main activity.” Later on, however, she told Outlook, an Indian newsmagazine, inan interview **that the Pakistanis had blown her comments out of proportion.

On Twitter, a week ahead of the hearing, Dr Fair called Ralph Peters, the fellow witness, a “nut” and asked “WHAT does he know?” On Saturday, she also irked the Balochs by questioning their majority status in Balochistan while in another Tweet she warned the separatists not to “expect me to support an independent Balochistan”.

**Public debate

Dr. Akbar S. Ahmed, Pakistan’s former high commissioner to the United Kingdom, told Dawn.com that the congressional hearing was a “significant step” in highlighting Balochistan’s problems. “The information provided in the event,” he said, “will not only be used by members of the US Congress but will also be picked up by the world media.”**

**“The shocking stories of torture and murder in Balochistan will become part of the public debate. It is in the interest of Pakistan to quickly and effectively resolve the situation in Balochistan bringing back the Baluch with honour, respect and dignity,” said Dr Ahmed, who is currently the Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies at the American University in Washington DC.****Dr Ahmed, who served in 1980s as the Commissioner of three districts in Balochistan, says the hearing can potentially create a great deal of negative publicity for Pakistan.
**
**Close watchers
**
In the United States, the conflict in Balochistan has been gaining remarkable attention of late. While some officials from the government and non-governmental organisations have only expressed concern over the situation, other individuals, including former army soldiers, State department officials and members of the US Congress, have now begun to publicly assert support for an independent Balochistan.

For instance, on January 15, Victoria Nuland, the State Department spokeswoman, expressed America’s “deep concern”](http://www.dawn.com/2012/01/15/us-urges-pakistan-to-hold-dialogue-on-balochistan.html) over the ongoing violence in Balochistan, especially targeted killings, disappearances and human rights violations.

“This (Balochistan) is a complex issue. We strongly believe that the best way forward is for all the parties to resolve their differences through peaceful dialogue,” she said.

Last year on November 16, the State Department deputy spokesman, Mark Toner, had also observed during a press briefing, “You know, more broadly, we do have concerns about the situation in Balochistan. We’ve addressed those concerns with the government of Pakistan.”

**Nationalist view

**Baloch nationalists are cautiously monitoring Wednesday’s hearing.

“To be honest, we are not very optimistic about this meeting,” Sardar Akhtar Mengal, a former chief minister of Balochistan, told Dawn.com, “but both support and attention from the US are significant because the presence of the US cannot be overlooked in South East Asia. It is essential that the US gives attention to Balochistan, as the aid that is given to Pakistan in the name of war against terror is being spent to commit atrocities in Balochistan.”

A political expert in Washington DC, who requested anonymity, said during the election year, the Republicans are likely to bring up the Balochistan issue to castigate Democratic President Barrack Obama for deliberately keeping quiet against Pakistan, an ally in the war on terror, for allegedly misusing American assistance to fight the secular Balochs instead of quashing the Taliban.

After the killing of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan, many American policymakers have become disillusioned with Pakistan and now some of them propose an independent Balochistan to fight religious extremism. Last month, Louie Gohmert, another Republican Congressman from Texas, suggested that the US should, “talk about creating a Balochistan in the southern part of Pakistan…they love us. They’ll stop the IEDs (improvised explosive devices) and all the weaponry coming into Afghanistan, and we got a shot to win over there.”

**Sardar Mengal, who leads the largest Balochistan National Party (BNP), says the hearing does not mean that the Washington is going to support the Baloch cause in the future.

**“What the US can do for us is to care for the Baloch as human beings. Since Washington is apparently a committed supporter of human rights, it is obligatory that the US should stop the genocide of the Baloch nation by the authorities as it has done in other parts of the world, supporting their right of self-determination.”

M. Chris Mason, a Senior Fellow at the (http://www.c4ads.org/), who recently retired from the US Foreign Service, has emerged as another ardent proponent of free Balochistan in the United States.

**In an article, Mason, who lecturers at the prestigious National Defense University, argued an independent Balochistan would solve many of the [Af-Pak] region’s most intractable problems overnight and would create “a territorial buffer between rogue states Iran and Pakistan.”
**
“The answer to the current Pakistani train-wreck is… recognising Balochistan’s legitimate claim to independence… to help the Baluchis go the way of the Bangladeshis in achieving their dream of freedom from tyranny, corruption and murder at the hands of the diseased state,” he wrote.

**Routine matter
**
Hassan Abbas, a scholar based in Washington DC who until recently was Quaid-i-Azam Chair Professor at Columbia University in New York, seriously doubts if the US will officially support Baloch nationalists at this time as this will complicate US-Pakistan relations.

“I think the hearing is a routine matter as all security related issues in Pakistan are being analysed in the policy world with keen interest as well as concern. The hearing will discuss human rights issue as well as politics,” says Abbas, who is also a Senior Advisor at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, “but the hearing itself will not create any serious diplomatic row. The US Congress must listen and understand that there is a variety of perspectives on the subject.”

**Dr Ahmed, meanwhile, attributes the deepening crisis in Balochistan to Islamabad’s failure to understand that time is running out for it.

**“The leaders of Pakistan are so focussed on the power struggles in Islamabad that they seem to have little will or imagination to deal with the urgent issues that concern the country’s largest province of Balochistan.”

**How will Islamabad respond to the hearing?
**
**“Pakistan’s establishment is quite sensitive about the Balochistan crisis and they will follow the hearings closely and sceptically,” says Hassan Abbas, whose bookPakistan’s Drift into Extremism](Amazon.com) was published in 2005.

****According to Abbas, hawkish elements in Pakistani media are likely to create a lot of hue and cry over the hearing. Yet he cautions, “They will serve Pakistan better by focussing on projecting the concerns of the ordinary Baloch people, who are disenfranchised, distressed and increasingly getting disenchanted.”

**Sardar Mengal of BNP, who was detained in Karachi for several months during the Pervez Musharraf regime, predicts there would be a definite reaction from the government.

“They can only display their superiority to the ones who are weaker, and in this case, the Baloch are the weaker ones,” he says and warns, “But if there is a reaction from Pakistan toward us, this time it will be once and for all. Either the Baloch will swim across or sink as a nation.”

The writer is a freelance journalist based in Washington DC and the author of The Redefined Dimensions of the Baloch Nationalist Movement.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

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Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

I get what you are trying to say but the point remains that trying to present, as you earlier did, patently erroneous and fanciful stuff as facts reflects poorly on you and undermines your case.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Congressional Baluchistan Witness Prepares for Pakistan Policy Firestorm

**In an election year, anything is possible. But, when anything includes the U.S. policy approach to Pakistan, Congress must remain a responsible stakeholder. Members of Congress must clearly convey their intentions when taking on potentially contentious issues that risk undermining one of the Barack Obama Administration’s and the U.S. military’s most important strategic partnerships. Baluchistan is clearly one of those issues. However, the Congressmen who have scheduled a hearing on Baluchistan for this week have failed to properly set expectations as to what they are trying to accomplish. This could raise fears that some in Congress are recklessly engaged in a high stakes gamble to undermine the Administration’s policy approach on Pakistan under the guise of Baloch human rights concerns.
**
Regardless of whether or not this is true, the scheduling of the hearing has increased expectations among some in the Baloch diaspora that the U.S. will support their cause. It also has forced Pakistan to question how committed the U.S. is to Pakistan’s territorial integrity. Such consequences pose great risks for the Administration’s ongoing efforts in South and Southwest Asia. Mr. Ali Dayan Hasan, the Pakistan Director of Human Rights Watch and one of the hearing’s scheduled witnesses, is well aware of the serious risks posed by the hearing. However, he also sees the hearing as an opportunity to educate members of Congress and the American public on the very real human rights violations being prosecuted against civilians on both sides in Baluchistan. His objective therefore will be to remain on point on human rights issues and not be drawn into the crosshairs of whether or not to support the Balkanization of Pakistan.

**On February 8th, an open hearing on Baluchistan will be held by the U.S. House of Representatives’ Committee on Foreign Affairs. The hearing will be brought by the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, chaired by Republican Congressman Dana Rohrabacher.
**
While news of the hearing is now public, it remains unclear what has motivated Congressman Rohrabacher and his subcommittee to move to an open hearing on the issue at this time. When asked for comment, his office declined by saying that they would prefer to speak after the hearing due to “the sensitivity of the issue.”
**Given that news of the hearing has already garnered significant negative media and government attention in Pakistan, experts that I spoke with find it surprising that neither Congressman Rohrabacher nor his colleagues connected to the Baloch diaspora are willing to discuss the agenda behind the hearing. This leaves more than one Western expert on Pakistan uncomfortable with holding the hearing under such circumstances, especially following Congressman Rohrabacher’s recent statements appearing to endorse U.S. support of Baloch independence.
**
As one Pakistan scholar recently confided, the Congressional faction pushing Baloch affairs is not taking responsibility for the consequences of their actions. Instead, they appear willing to let mere news of a hearing undermine the Administration’s bilateral efforts with Pakistan without justifying their actions to fellow Americans, foreign partners and allies, and others in the international community.

**Dangerous Liaisons
**
**Walking into this potential firestorm will be Hasan. Of the three witnesses scheduled to testify, he almost certainly possesses the greatest command of the current on-the-ground human rights situation in Pakistan. He also is extremely knowledgeable on how the U.S. Afghanistan-Pakistan (Af-Pak) foreign policy approach affects Pakistan’s domestic peace and stability.
**
**In discussing the upcoming hearing, Hasan acknowledges that he is well aware of the potential challenges facing him on the Hill: “A hearing on this issue should have taken place sooner. I therefore welcome the opportunity to present our case. That said, I hope that the hearing sends a clear message to human rights abusers on all sides in Balochistan that their actions will not be accepted. If instead the hearing descends into a witch hunt against any party, it will damage U.S. credibility further in the region and shrink the room that the U.S. has to facilitate resolution between conflict actors. ”
**
**Hasan’s biggest concern is that the hearing could reinforce Pakistani fears that the U.S. supports its Balkanization: “Any suggestion or idea that the U.S. is open to undermining Pakistan’s territorial integrity would be a terrible idea. Anyone who thinks that the U.S. can affect such a shift in conjunction with its other imperatives is mistaken. These ideas are based on lurid fantasies rather than political reality. Such insinuations or statements will only increase the suffering of the Baloch and fuel ethnic violence. It will feed into Pakistan’s worst fears and do both Pakistan and the United States a great disservice.”
**
Hasan is not alone with this concern. Advocates on both sides of Baloch independence recognize that the hearing could generate increased Congressional support for policy initiatives in direct contradiction with the Obama Administration.

In preparing his remarks, Hasan therefore is trying to limit any opportunity for Congressmen to take him off-point: “Human Rights Watch’s motivation for participating in the hearing is to highlight grave human rights abuses by the Pakistani military, religious extremist groups and also by Baloch nationalists. This is an issue that deserves the attention of and constructive engagement by the international community, including the United States.

But, we are not there to take sides or take positions beyond our mandate on issues such as Baloch independence. It is our position that Pakistani law, as embodied in the constitution, requires the government to protect their citizens, and that U.S. law, as outlined in the Leahy Amendment, requires sanctioning any specific Pakistani military unit or individual that has committed verifiable human rights violations. And at all times, we expect and urge all parties including the US to act within the ambit of relevant international law.”

**Staying on Track
**
Hasan is aware of the risk that the hearing could expand to Baloch issues beyond Pakistan’s borders. On such issues, Hasan intends to remain silent: “I have been told that I would only be providing a historical context-based presentation on Balochistan issues in Pakistan. I will therefore limit my comments to my area of expertise - Pakistan.”

One issue that he does not want to remain silent on though is the hearing itself. **Since the schedule was published, many in the Baloch community have expressed their concern over the absence of a Baloch witness on the schedule. Hasan shares their disquiet and hopes that one will be added before Wednesday: “It is a matter of great concern that there is no Baloch as a witness.”
**
**Hasan also acknowledges that the participation of Ralph Peters is something of a wild card: “It is of concern that Ralph Peters is one of the witnesses. What expertise does he have on this matter?” It therefore could benefit the hearing if the Congressmen supporting Peters’ participation spoke out in defense of his relevance to the proceedings.
**
**Levelling Expectations
**
**Hasan is careful to set expectations for his own remarks as well. Those who expect his comments to be in full support of what the Baloch diaspora sees at its core interests may be surprised: “Though it has committed the most egregious abuses, the Pakistani military is but one actor in this conflict. Human Rights Watch has documented abuses by not just the Pakistani military but also religious militant groups such as the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, and by Baloch nationalist groups. While Pakistani military, paramilitary and intelligence personnel are involved in widespread torture, disappearances and targeted killings, Baloch nationalists, by their own admission, are also targeting and killing non-Baloch.
**
If you are a non-Baloch living in Balochistan, you now fear for your life not because you are politically engaged but just because of who you are. The Pakistani military argues it is engaged in operations against people it deems “criminals”, which all happen to be Baloch, and alleges Indian support for these actors. While these assertions and accusations are contested and do not excuse the heinous abuses committed by the Pakistani military, it is important to note that this is a complex conflict that should be approached with care and understanding. In no event, should the acute and ongoing suffering of the Baloch be used as a sledgehammer to settle unrelated bilateral scores with Pakistan or in ways that exacerbate an already volatile situation."

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!


](http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iJvMw5Y2L9w&feature=youtu.be)

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Highly recommended to watch this video!!!

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

part 2

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

part 3