Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

The problem of Balochistan (which is deteriorating with each passing day), and the Prime minister does not know what the policies of his government are, ironic isnt it?http://tribune.com.pk/story/334802/cacophony-and-silence-govt-unfazed-by-us-hearing-on-balochistan/

Cacophony and silence: Govt unfazed by US hearing on Balochistan

By Qamar Zaman
Published: February 11, 2012

**The hearing on Balochistan in Washington sparked a sense of urgency among some in parliament, but was unable to solicit a response from the government.

**

Obsessed with securing support for its chronically deferred 20th Amendment, postponed for a seventh time, the government paid little heed to questions raised by lawmakers on Balochistan’s volatile situation in the National Assembly session on Friday.

**Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani heard the points of orders raised by members from Balochistan, but left the house without issuing any response.
**

**“Why is the prime minister not responding to the issue [of Balochistan],” asked ruling Pakistan Peoples Party’s (PPP) lawmaker from the province, Mir Humayun Aziz Kurd.

**
**“Tell us in clear terms why the army is not accepting [the Baloch people] so that we could take a decision … in case we are unacceptable,” Kurd said.

**
**He suggested the government take immediate and concrete steps to address grievances of the province, instead of mere commitments.

**
**“What is the contribution of the special committee [headed by PPP leader Syed Khursheed Shah] in addressing the issues of Balochistan,” Kurd added.

**
He also demanded the elimination of the role of security and intelligence agencies from the province.

**Kurd was seconded by Yaqoob Bizanjo who asked the premier if he had any plan to bring peace to Balochistan.
**

**“You have to tell us before it is too late and we are no more in this house,” he said.
**

**Bizanjo added that “none of the political parties took an initiative to resolve the issue of Balochistan as they did in developing consensus over constitutional amendments.”
**

**Bushra Gohar from the Awami National Party questioned the efficacy of the parliamentary committee on the province: “The issue of Balochistan is being discussed in the US; what are our committees doing in this regard?”
**

The only government functionary to respond was Interior Minister Rehman Malik who offered to give a briefing to parliamentarians about the status of the Aghaz-e-Haqooq-e-Balochistan package, the role of Frontier Constabulary (FC) and other related issues next week.

Malik said his statement of asking Senator Lashkar Raisani to make disgruntled youth lay down their arms was misconstrued, and that it meant to give a ‘good message’ to the public.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Balochistan and freedomBy Saroop Ijaz
Published: February 11, 2012

It has to be alarming when one feels compelled to resort to George Orwell so often when talking about the prevailing state of affairs. Nevertheless, Orwell wrote a brilliant essay titled, “In front of your nose”, articulating what he believed to be the real singular challenge in critical thought and hence life. His contention was that it is always a consistent struggle and often the hardest to see and acknowledge what is just in front of one’s nose. Orwell writes, “…we are all capable of believing things which we know to be untrue, and then, when we are finally proved wrong, impudently twisting the facts so as to show that we were right. Intellectually, it is possible to carry on this process for an indefinite time: the only check on it is that sooner or later a false belief bumps up against solid reality, usually on a battlefield.” Let these words sink in, and now think about Balochistan.

**The US congressional hearing is both reassuring and distressing. It is comforting to see that the murder, pillage and strangulation in Balochistan have now been able to attract attention, even if only outside the country. The only worrying aspect is because it was a ‘US’ congressional hearing, those stubborn or malicious enough to deny the evidence and findings need no more than to say it was conducted by the US and then go off on a tangent about half baked notions of imperialism and sovereignty, unfortunate and silly, but such are the times and the place that we live in. Although the hearing did not and realistically could not propose a strategy or a solution, it did bring to light that violence and oppression is not sustainable for long, Balochistan is no longer the black hole our establishment believed it to be. In essence what was always in front of our nose has been shoved right in our face, making it ethically impossible to miss it now.

**
**To say that murder and even rape in Balochistan does not have the same sting in our national conversation as the same things happening in Lahore or Islamabad is an understatement to the point of saying almost nothing at all. **The gulf is fantastic, having almost surreal proportions. The congressional hearing had one unavoidable background question i.e. do the Baloch have a right to self determination. The question is not new, yet meticulous care is exercised to evade or at the very least substantially water it down to an insinuation. The lengths that people would go to avoid the mere mention of this question is outstanding. One phrase that we do not hear in our discourse is “the Baloch struggle for freedom”, admittedly an arresting expression. Complete self-determination is a largely empirical question contingent upon ethnic diversity, history and geography. I have neither the expertise nor is the question susceptible to be answered in an opinion piece. Yet why is the discussion not taking place in Pakistan. It is probably because even those who are vocally opposed to the outright use of force and terror find at least one possible answer to the question of self-determination almost too grim to contemplate.

The demolition of human rights in Balochistan and the crushing repression cannot be ascribed to caprice. If one is able to get passed the sheer cynicism of the situation, there is a brute fact to be confronted, that being that it is very principled, the principle being preserving the integrity of Pakistan. What remains unclear is the cost that we are willing to incur or more accurately wreak to ensure this preserving. It is a tragedy in both the historical senses of the word. The Greek connotation of tragedy is one where a protagonist possesses a fatal flaw, whereas Hegel believed it be a conflict of two competing rights. The tragic flaw here is a passionate yet mindless adherence to the national ideology, disregarding the pain being suffered and inflicted. The two competing rights are the maintenance of a pretense of national solidity and the right of a people to govern them. In both these interpretations, the perpetrators of the violence in Balochistan, which mind you is inching towards genocide every day, are at peace with themselves, since they are doing it for a higher imperative. This contentment while committing murder reminds one of Jean Martin Charcot, a teacher of Freud who once in clinical description of neurosis famously used the phrase “le beau calme de l’hysterique” (The beautiful calm of the hysteric).

**The unwillingness to admit or consider the fact that in regards to Baluchistan we may have taken a wrong turn or perhaps were on the wrong road to begin with cannot be compensated for by travelling faster or more viciously. The question is fast becoming foreseeable, what moral position would one take if and when the largely state sponsored use of force became an obvious genocide or when the case for a humanitarian intervention became an arguably justified one. Fairly forbidding thoughts are they not. Yet that might be the price of ignorance or silence.

**
The situation in Balochistan is approaching with rapid pace, if it has not already reached the point where it makes a mockery of all armchair, generalist analysis. Is the situation still salvageable or redeemable? I don’t know. However there is a simple, though not easy way to find out. Talk to the Baloch, all of them. Violence and the threat of it by anyone, including Baloch nationalists should be condemned unequivocally. Yet I find it repellent that those who will get all mushy when advocating chatting up homicidal fanatics, murdering for the sake of murder, suddenly lose their zeal for the art of conversation when it comes to Baloch nationalist, even those who have taken up arms. There is one indispensible pre-requisite or condition for any such talk to materialise and certainly to achieve anything, which is acknowledging the utterly uncomfortable and unnerving possibility that they might not be successful and in that case we will be able to respect that.

Published in The Express Tribune, February 12[SUP]th[/SUP], 2012.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Pakistan should keep an eye on the American steps vis a vis balochistan but it's more important to put our own house in order, because if the international community comes to the conclusion that Pakistan is carrying out a genocide in balochistan we will not be able to prevent international community's actions (including intervention) in support of the baloch's. The time is running out but there is no urgency in the Pakistani government as well as opposition ranks.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Syria part 2 ?

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

It is very easy to avoid this all if it is handed over to Baluch themselves to handle .
Our always failed intermediate pass intellectuals can do nothing except surrender .
They have destroyed everything .We blame America for every thing but actually this is our establishment doing all as puppet of America.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

If anyone has any doubt about Pakistan’s atrocities, wanton kidnapping, murders, and looting of Balochistan, this Al Jazeera video should clarify that. Especially watch the Pak army rep claiming only 200 Baloch have been abducted while in the very previous scene you can see proof for thousands! Such open faced denial! Watch the women and the kids lamenting on the streets.

And some of you blame India, Israel, America…whatever and anyone else other than owning up!

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

For knowing more the situation
Provincially Administered Tribal Areas - Wikipedia, the free ](Redirect Notice)

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

http://dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2012\02\12\story_12-2-2012_pg3_2#.TzeK_w3DLEs.twitter

**COMMENT: Taking cognizance —Mir Mohammad Ali Talpur

**

http://dailytimes.com.pk/images/2012/02/12/20120212_35.jpg

Surely Balochistan is not going to become independent due to Congressional committee meetings. The only positive outcome of this meeting for the Baloch is that it has highlighted their plight and this may encourage other western countries to pay more attention to the human rights abuses in Balochistan

**Sadiq Umrani, President PPP Balochistan, while condemning the cowardly murder of Brahamdagh Bugti’s sister and niece in Karachi by the intelligence agencies on the Balochistan Assembly floor made a shocking disclosure that he and two other ministers, Yunus Mullazai and Zafar Zehri, in November 2011 saw Frontier Corps (FC) personnel holding two blindfolded and handcuffed men at the roadside on a highway near Mangochar. He said that the FC men gunned them down and their bodies were found from the area the next day. Equally shocking is Umrani’s four month silence on the incident.

This shocking disclosure like all other known atrocities against the Baloch has fallen on deaf ears and gone unnoticed. Atrocities against the Baloch have come to be accepted as a normal state of affairs by all and even the inhumanly gruesome murder of Brahamdagh’s sister and niece has evoked minimal response from civil society or the media.
**
**Murdering women to settle scores is the lowest ebb that establishments can reach and it has been reached here. Banok Zamur Bugti was not Brahamdagh Bugti’s sister alone — she is a sister of all honourable and conscientious Baloch. It is an outrage and a wound which all the Baloch will forever remember.
**
**A national daily reported that these murders were a message for Brahamdagh Bugti to desist from resisting Pakistan. Apparently the establishment overlooked the fact that the message they gave by killing his grandfather Sardar Akbar Bugti went unheeded, so why would he heed these chilling murders and give up resistance now.
**
**The state and its representatives forget that it was they who initiated the hostilities against the peaceful Baloch and the Baloch are exercising their right to defend themselves and to secure their rights. Ironically, Baloch resistance to atrocities and injustices is considered a crime while state atrocities are deemed legal.
**
Interior Minister Rehman Malik in the National Assembly said the government had taken cognizance of the killings of Bakhtiar Khan Domki’s family. He was in turn castigated by the assembly members for his remarks relating these killings to those of the FC personnel killed in the recent attacks. Incidentally, the Domki family killings followed and also prompted attacks on FC personnel in Balochistan by militant groups. After the killings of the FC personnel in Margat area, the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) spokesperson stated these were in retaliation for the killings of the Baloch ladies.

**The Baloch understand how utterly worthless and meaningless Rehman Malik’s cognizance taking is but interestingly someone else too has taken cognizance of the situation in Balochistan. Yes, the US House Committee on Foreign Affairs took cognizance and convened a Congressional hearing for an exclusive discussion on Balochistan.

Amid the deteriorating mutual relationship between Pakistan and the US, this is an important development. This powerful House of Representatives Committee oversees the US’s foreign assistance programmes and experts believe it can jeopardise US assistance to Pakistan over human rights violations in Balochistan and this worries Pakistan no end.** It follows the US State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland’s expression of concern over human rights abuses in Balochistan on January 15. The world is slowly waking to the atrocities in Balochistan.

Republican Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, who recently co-authored an article with Congressman Louie Gohmert expressing support for an independent Balochistan, chaired the hearing. In his piece he had written: “Perhaps we should even consider support for a Balochistan carved out of Pakistan to diminish radical power there (in Pakistan).”

At the Committee meeting in his opening remarks, Mr Rohrabacher said that Balochistan is a turbulent land marred by human rights violations “by regimes that are against US values”. He outlined the history of Pakistan’s creation, and highlighted Balochistan’s grievances vis-à-vis natural resources, and said that the province’s wealth was being taken by the dominant Punjabi elite.

Ali Dayan Hasan, the Pakistan director for Human Rights Watch (HRW), in his submitted remarks, said that the cases documented by the HRW show that Pakistan’s security forces and its intelligence agencies were involved in the enforced disappearance of ethnic Baloch. He termed the military’s role in the province as brutal, and an occupying one.

In his testimony, analyst Ralph Peters, who had in his June 2006 article ‘Blood borders: How a better Middle East would look’ published a map of free Balochistan, called Pakistan a supporter of terrorism. In his submitted testimony, Amnesty International’s Advocacy Director T Kumar called on the US to “apply the Leahy Amendment without waivers to all Pakistani military units in Balochistan”. The Leahy law prohibits US military assistance to foreign military units that violate human rights with impunity.

Dr M Hosseinbor, a Baloch lawyer and witness at the hearing, quoting Baloch sources said that nearly 4,000 people have disappeared in the province since 2001. In his submitted remarks, he called on the US to support an independent Balochistan “in case Pakistan or Iran or both collapsed from within”.

This meeting has naturally evoked an adverse reaction here from the Foreign Office and the Senate where it was condemned as ‘direct intervention’. The senators across the divide consider the meeting as an affront for Pakistan’s sovereignty and have expressed anger. It just goes to show how misplaced their priorities are, as there is hardly a squeak from them when atrocities are committed against the Baloch but if someone highlights the atrocities, it is resented.

Surely Balochistan is not going to become independent due to Congressional committee meetings. The only positive outcome of this meeting for the Baloch is that it has highlighted their plight and this may encourage other western countries to pay more attention to the human rights abuses in Balochistan. Balochistan is slowly emerging on the world scene not only because of the state atrocities but also due to valiant and relentless Baloch resistance.

**This meeting is also fraught with adverse consequences for the Baloch; some people in the world would not hesitate to cut off their nose to spite their face. The Pakistani establishment falls into this pathetic category and I fear that just to show to the US that it does not care for what its committees say or do, it will increase the atrocities and human rights abuses against the Baloch.
**
It really does not matter if the US or Rehman Malik take cognizance of the abuses in Balochistan; what really matters is that the Baloch have taken cognizance of the injustices against them and have decided to resist the same with all resources and energies that they can muster and this is what will eventually tilt the balance in their favour.

The writer has an association with the Baloch rights movement going back to the early 1970s. He can be contacted at [email protected]

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Body of missing BRP leader found near TurbatBy Our Correspondent
Published: February 13, 2012

****QUETTA: **The mutilated body of missing Baloch Republican Party (BRP) leader Sangat Sana was found dumped near Turbat on Monday.

**
Official sources said that Sana’s body was found near Murgab by the some passers-by, who informed the nearby Levies station. The body was shifted to the Turbat district headquarter hospital, where locals identified the deceased as Sangat Sana, a member of the central committee of the BRP.

Sources said that the body was mutilated and had bullet wounds.

According to Voice for Baloch Missing Persons (VBMP), an organization working for the recovery of Baloch missing persons, Sana Sangat was whisked away from Kolpur area in Bolan on December 8[SUP]th[/SUP], 2008. He was also the former chairman of Baloch Student Organization (BSO-Azad).

His father is currently on hunger strike along with other relatives of Baloch Missing persons outside the Karachi Press Club.

The VBMP has strongly condemned the killing.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Balochistan - the war that Pakistanis want to conveniently sweep under the carpet and forget about.

The first thing that must happen is that our army must withdraw from it. People here state that the Balochi militants our wrong to attack security forces but if they treat them as colonial subjects, then they are not wrong. How woul you feel if that was your area neglected and bombed?

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

I want to get something out. The FC / military operation began when bugti decided to bomb sui gas lines and tried to rocket musharraf's helicopter en route to southern balochistan. It has escalated too much IMO, which is a reflection of the poor state of Pakistani counter insurgency tactics, but NO STATE / COUNTRY / NATION allows its security forces to be attacked by militants. If you don't believe me, then go get a gun and try to shoot a cop in US / UK / Canada / Europe etc and see how they put you down like a dog (pun or no pun intended).

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

A column by Hamid Meer
Known puppet
But now some truth
http://e.jang.com.pk/jmimages/facebook.jpg

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

^ good article, but i doubt it will make any difference (in the mentality of the army and a vast majority of Pakistanis).

Yesterday, the National Assembly passed a resolution against American interference in balochistan, why couldnt they pass a similar resolution against the attroctities being meted to the Baloch??? Only yesterday they received a dead body of a former BRP leader, whose stomach had been cut open.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

There is a criminal silence and carelessness from the mainstream political parties towards the burning issue of Balochistan and until and unless political vacuum is taken care of, nothing is going to change in the restive province.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Congratulations, the army chief is saying that there is no operation in Balochistan! Maybe some aliens (or the militants are killing themselves to show the military in a bad light :naraz:) are killing nationalists there.

**No military operation under way in Balochistan: COAS
**
ISLAMABAD: **Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani has made it emphatically clear that no military operation is under way in Balochistan.

“Not a single soldier of the army is combating in Balochistan,” the army chief said here on Saturday while talking to a group of media persons at a lunch hosted by Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani in honour of the visiting President of Sri Lanka, Mahinda Rajapaksa, at the Prime Minister House.

Admiral Asif Sandhila, Chief of Naval Staff (CNS) and Air Chief Marshal Rao Qamar Suleman, Chief of Air Staff, were also present on the occasion.

To a query, General Kayani said that Frontier Constabulary (FC) is deployed in various parts of the province in aid of the civilian administration under article 245 of the Constitution. He said the FC was working under the provincial government.

**The army chief was candid in offering his comments on the situation in Balochistan but declined the impression of the army in any manner having any link with the affairs of the province. “We are maintaining our position strictly in accordance with the Constitution. It’s a baseless accusation to suggest that the army is taking part in any action in Balochistan,” he said.
**
The COAS was hopeful that the situation would become normal in the province as the provincial authorities are trying their best to overcome the activities of disgruntled elements. :halo:
**
Earlier, Prime Minister Gilani introduced General Kayani to the Sri Lankan president who inquired about the well-being of his troops. General Kayani responded that the armed forces are in excellent shape and doing their duties diligently. The two also had a brief chat. The lunch was also attended by former prime minister and president of the Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q) Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, Chairman Senate Farooq H Naek, Senate Deputy Chairman Jan Muhammad Jamali, leader of the house in the Senate Syed Nayyar Hussain Bukhari, opposition leader Senator Maulana Abdul Ghafoor Haideri, Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar, some federal ministers, Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir, Advisor to the PM Syed Qasim Shah, Defence and Cabinet Secretary Nargis Sethi and Principal Secretary to the PM Khushnood Lashari.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Provincial authorities? Which authorities? :bummer: He must be talking about his buddy Pasha. I don’t think any other ISI boss has as many failures to his credit as this guys has. What a dubious distinction.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Govt is calling for All Parties Conference to discuss Balochistan issue …

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

It's already four years, a couple of months left for the government to go. The situation has gone from bad to worse during this time.

Why the apc when the coas is saying no operation is being carried out, and Rahman Malik is quite clear that no conversation can be carried out with the militants unless they surrender.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

http://www.dawn.com/2012/02/16/balochistans-agony.html

Balochistan’s agony *(http://www.dawn.com/author/iarehman) | Opinion |](http://www.paklinks.com/opinion) From the Newspaper2 hours ago

**THE latest developments regarding Balochistan have prompted many bleary-eyed observers to give Islamabad wake-up calls but the establishment has shown no sign of its ability to comprehend the gravity of the situation. Instead, it has chosen to continue with its blame-game.
**
**The US congressional hearing on Balochistan this month was an event that should not have been left to brainless denial-writers. Much of what was said during the hearing, regarding the abuse of the rights of the people in this part of Pakistan, should have been known to the Pakistani authorities.
**
What new evidence these proceedings revealed was, firstly, the level of the Baloch participants’ despair. One of them was quoted as saying that an independent Balochistan would put Gwadar at the disposal of the United States, block the plan for a Pakistan-Iran gas pipeline and also fight Al Qaeda. Instead of condemning the supplicant’s eagerness to become the slave of a distant power, Islamabad’s ruling elite should concentrate on what it has done to reduce the proud Baloch to their present straits.

Secondly, the international discourse has undergone a significant change. The world has been talking about Balochistan for many years — about the denial of autonomy to its people, the exclusion of civilians from decision-making processes, the exploitation of its resources by outsiders, the involuntary disappearances and the appearance of mutilated bodies of the ‘missing persons’, the target killing of the Hazara Shias et al.

**The reaction of foreign audiences used to be limited to requests to the government of Pakistan to honour its responsibilities.

Nearly all those who listened to the Baloch activists in exile, and they were not limited to Americans, took care to stop short of referring to a change in Balochistan’s political status. Now there is no hesitation in mentioning the right to self-determination.

**The significance of the entry of this expression in the international discourse should not be lost on anyone.

**A word stronger and broader in its sweep than ‘irony’ is needed to describe the situation Pakistan’s rulers have created for themselves. For years they have been cautioned against taking the course they had followed to push East Bengal (East Pakistan) out of the state. But they have refused to heed the counsel of sanity with a single-minded resolve not witnessed in any area of their endeavours.
**
**The repetition of the first stage of the East Bengal people’s alienation, namely, the loss of trust in the federation’s capacity to act fairly by them, was completed in Balochistan quite some time ago. Balochistan crossed the second stage in the process, that is, resort to armed struggle, even prior to the first stage.
**
**Now it has been pushed into the third phase of its struggle — international support for whatever it may ask for. And the establishment’s response is no different than what it was in 1970-71 — the trouble in Balochistan is entirely the doing of foreign elements hostile to Pakistan who are helping a few malcontents with money and arms! The same 40-year-old script. It failed then and it will not succeed now.
**
**The born-yesterday politicians are making incoherent statements about the need to catch the killers of Akbar Bugti. They do not know that the Baloch are still mourning the killing of the sons of Doda Khan and Mengal and Marri. Not only are they not getting anywhere close to Bugti’s murderers they were not able to prevent the barbaric killing of Brahmdagh Bugti’s sister and her young daughter — a provocation and insult both.
**
**Off and on appeals are made to open negotiations with the Baloch leaders in exile. Most people of reason are likely to declare the time for that has passed. But that was only one of the two tracks open to the establishment to win over the estranged people of Balochistan. The other track led through sincere engagement with the people who are still living in their traditional settlements.
**
**These people ignored the calls of separatists for decades, for there has hardly ever been a period when one group or another was not agitating for an independent or greater Balochistan. The people in general did not favour the separatists because they were not sure of a better alternative, or independence was not considered a feasible proposition, or the costs were believed to be prohibitive.
**
**That these considerations have become irrelevant offers a measure of the indiscriminate manner in which the powers that be have wounded the Baloch in his body and in his soul. Some of the worst acts of tyranny and contemptuous disregard for human dignity in the history of Pakistan have been reserved for the people of Balochistan.
**
**Where else in this country have the people been rendered strangers in their own land? Where else has an ex-chief minister been put in a cage inside a court? Where else have student leaders been tortured to death or to a state of permanent disability? And where else are bullet-riddled bodies believed to be thrown by the roadside by state agencies? Which other people have been threatened by a president with decimation before they know what hit them?The threat to Pakistan is not posed by the expatriates or their foreign patrons; it comes from the alienation of the masses. Three years ago, a young man who said any reference to negotiations or peace was an insult to him belonged to a tiny minority; today those who think otherwise are in a minority and they have lost the courage to speak.
**
The people of Balochistan feel they have been let down by all state institutions. They have a grievance against the post-2008 regime that their right to representative government was ignored. Much has been said about the ineligibility of people elected on lists full of bogus votes but little about a flawed election in Balochistan that a majority boycotted. They feel betrayed by the so-called national political parties that only seek their own bases in Balochistan. They are angry with the government for failing to see that the Aghaz-i-Huqooq has not begun anything worthwhile.

They have their reservations about the judiciary too. **The non-implementation of the recommendations of the judicial commission of 2011 rankles in many a heart. An ordinary Baloch cannot believe the Balochistan High Court Bar president’s petition has received the priority the Supreme Court attaches to the memo affair or to the employment of retired employees. It is doubtful if the common people of Balochistan are in a mood to talk to anyone. The second track too seems to have been blocked.
**
What anybody interested in Balochistan must not forget is that time makes many human devices irrelevant. What could have placated the angry Baloch in the 1950s will not work in 2012. Today any Balochistan settlement will have to be more on its people’s terms than on the terms of Islamabad’s paramount power. Any further delay in realising this will make the possible terms of settlement more and more adverse to Islamabad.

Instead of talking about talks the federation must take some action to establish its bona fides. Everyone knows what these steps are. But before anything else the incompetent keepers of the state will have to shed their robes of self-righteousness and give up all notions of their invincibility and infallibility.

History does not forgive anyone who is neither blind nor illiterate and yet cannot read the writing on the wall.*

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

how can anyone claim America does not interfere in affairs of pakistan they run the country lets be real.

balochistan is rich in mineral resources so it is natural for United States with its puppet pakistan government to cause problems and then work to annexe this province to fully control it and steal the wealth.