Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

I'll tell you this much - watching the for/against arguements re Balooch, the arguements on both sides remind me eerily of the prelude to E.Pak/BanglaDesh era. The govt tries too hard to supress and the other side tries even harder to demand. Results are evident

re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

^^ Comparing Bangladesh with Balochistan is the heght of absurdity. Bangladesh was a popular movement supported by half the population that was 1000 miles away from the West part. Balochistan is a handful of foreign funded people without the support of the Balochista population.

re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Your attempted cover up of your lack of knoweldge has not worked.

You claim the ‘Islamic extermists’ in Balochistan were led by Bugti…a man who was not even Muslim!

Simple lesson for you little boy- don’t talk about things you know nothing about (apart from your prejudices) :rolleyes:

re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

roadrunner - are you serious? If the Baloochistan issue was that simple a mater of a handful of 'foreign' funded people do you think it would have taken so many 1000s in troops, so long? For a military govt it would have been a flyswat if what you say is true. And what 'foreign' country you think is interested and has the funds to do this? India? China?...come on! Outright denial doesn't make the problem go away. It did make the terriotory go away ...like in BD

re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

More daily victimisation of the Baloch,all over Pakistan

Family hopes for Saleem Baloch’s safe release

KARACHI: Within 36 hours of coming before the media in December 2006, and narrating his ordeal of being kidnapped and detained for over nine months, Saleem Baloch, the acting president of the Jamhoori Watan Party, was once again picked up, allegedly by the agencies.

Since then, there is no news about his whereabouts. At his house, situated in the Nawa Line area of Lyari, Saleem Baloch’s family members welcome each day with renewed hope. They also wonder about the nature of his crime for which he is being punished so severly, without any trial or chance to prove his innocence.

“All accusations against my husband are false. My husband is no terrorist and possesses no arsenal. Nor does he have links with Al-Qaeda, says Baloch’s wife, with tears in her eyes, adding “He should not be tortured until he can be proven guilty in court.” The family fears that confessions will be extracted under duress.

Baloch, the acting president of Jamhori Watan Party, was allegedly abducted by the law enforcement agencies again on 31 December 2006, within weeks of his being released earlier in the month.

Saleem Baloch was previously released on December 14, 2006 after being detained for over nine months. His arrests have been linked by the media to growing strife between the government and political forces in Balochistan.

Shortly after his release from his first arrest, he was again ‘picked up’ from his residence in Lyari Town on the morning before Eid-ul-Azha. Accompanied by his eight-year-old nephew, Saleem Baloch was returning home at 6:30am from the mosque after saying his Fajr prayers.

According to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, his abduction took place within 36 hours after he narrated his nine-month ordeal before the media in different cities of Pakistan.

He described his torture and also delivered a statement before a division bench of Sindh High Court. This statement contained apprehensions that he would be arrested by the secret agencies again.

On interviewing the family, it was learnt by The News that Saleem Baloch had been receiving threatening calls and letters on the pretext of his disclosures upon his release.

“My brother was sure he would be kidnapped once again and killed, but he still dared to come in the forefront to seek protection. He hoped that the court would ensure his security but his request was ignored several times over,” disclosed Saleem Baloch’s sister, Zainab.

The family suspects that this time round, he has again been picked up by law enforcement officials, due to the similar vehicles that were used on both occasions. On being informed by the neighbourhood that people were trying to abduct him, Baloch’s family immediately rushed out and attempted to save him but the kidnappers fled with their catch.

“I stood in front of the car to stop them but they sped up. The car would have run over me if I didn’t move aside,” recalls one of Saleem’s sister-in-law.

They also pointed guns at the family members to prevent anyone from chasing them. The victim’s abduction was also reported to the Lyari town police but to no avail. Saleem’s eight-year-old nephew, Naeem, who was with him at the time of the incident, still appears disturbed. According to Zainab, he recalls the incident quite a few times in a day and misses his uncle a lot.

“There were three cars, including a police mobile. They forced uncle to sit in the red car first then shifted him to the white one. While doing so they dragged him from car to another and accidentally hurt his leg too,” disclosed eight-year-old.

Clueless about her father’s whereabouts, Saleem’s elder daughter, Shahida Saleem, said: “If they cannot reveal his whereabouts, they should at least inform us about his safety. My father was not allowed to contact us when he was picked up last time too. We thought he would never return, but he did and that was the happiest moment in our lives.”

For his extended family, the seventeen days spent with him were no less than Eid. “I miss my son a lot. The government has no right to make false claims about human rights when it cannot guarantee basic human security,” wept Saleem’s mother, Naz Bibi who has suffered two heart attacks since her son went missing.

Saleem Baloch was the sole breadwinner in his house. Supporting an extended family of over fifteen members, his tanker business had been badly affected in his absence. “My younger brother has been looking after the business but he is unable to fulfill his responsibilities as he is also busy filing complaints from police stations to courts and seeking help of human rights organizations,” adds Zainab.

The HRCP has urged the Chief Justice to conduct an investigation into Saleem Baloch’s abduction without further delay.

http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=37854

re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

And people wonder why the Balochs are so completely alienated from society.

re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Nope, I did not claim tha Islamic extremists were led by Bugti. Show me one post amongst any of mine that your extremist (or Indian whichever is true) eyes can find in this thread where I make reference once to the assertion that Islamic extremists were led by Bugti.

The people that supported Bugti were his own tribe..3 tribes, not all, but parts of them, which are a drop in the well of the number of Baloch tribes. They supported Bugti due to the monetary handouts he was giving them..mercenaries if you like. The religious extremists are amongst these mercenaries (as you can tell even by the way they look), but the main problem with the relgious extremists are all over Pakistan where they decide to resort to violence against Pakistanis (which clearly you support).

re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Baloch people are not alienated from society. A brand new city is being built for them..even has a flash name..Platinum City, and they even form senior figures in the government and judiciary.

re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

^ then why are the people there rebelling? Platinum City etc reminds me of 'making up'. If you wrong someone and then buy them a gift, you think they will be thankful for that? I think there should be a more fundamental 'win hearts and minds' approach...otherwise these things will be just costly sops that only worsen expectations

re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Platinum City is going there because
1)Gwadar has been built
2)Control is no longer with the Sardars
3)The money has become available
4)New cities are being built in other province so why should Balochistan be excluded?

It's nothing to do with doing something wrong and trying to make up for it. That must be what you want to see.

re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

In past people of Balochistan were neglected and tribal chiefs were taken care of. When some chiefs were not taken care of (like Bhutto time) they revolted and Bhutto bombed them and sent army to crush them. Same happened before Bhutto, when one sardar was executed. So, most of the time in past, province was calm, still when some sardar got unhappy, provinces use to feel neglected.

Now, things are different. People of Balochistan are getting taken care of and tribal chiefs are getting neglected (to extend, though not completely). Thus, tribal chiefs are upset and wanting to show that province is upset, but reality is different.

These tribal chiefs are using propaganda that is based on misguidance. Just imagine; these tribal leaders are trying to scare Baloch that due to development people of other provinces would come to Balochistan and that would make them minority. Meanwhile, they themselves are living in Karachi-Sindh (that is not Balochistan). Actually most Baloch could not be caring anyhow, as most want good life and many would even leave their province to find good life.

Reality is that, people from Balochistan and NWFP are living in Sindh and Punjab in huge number (reality is that, many Sindhis have Baloch background) and when it comes to Balochistan (and NWFP), their leaders while themselves living in other provinces (Islamabad, Karachi or even Lahore); just to do negative politics, start shouting that they would become minority. Result is that, these two provinces are not getting developed and then they start shouting that they as provinces are getting neglected.

Nevertheless, hopefully and slowly Balochistan is going to get developed (InshaAllah), ball has started rolling, and in process life of ordinary Baloch would become better. That is different matter and it does not matter that in process, there would be lot of people from Sindh and Punjab going to live in Balochistan and value of tribal leaders in Balochistan would disappear (or would get less important). There would be some resistance from tribal leaders (because their importance would suffer) as it is happening these days, but with time, people of Balochistan and their interest (that is economical) would prevail (InshaAllah). They would be benefiting in Pakistan as equal citizen of Pakistan (not just citizen of Balochistan but as citizen of Pakistan), with equal rights, equal facilities, equal benefits and equal duties.

re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

^oh really then why did they observe a strike in the whole of quetta and other parts of balochistan after bugti was killed?.they offered him a 'ghaibana' namaz-i-janaza' as if he was mother teressa and protested against Musharraf.May be some people get what they deserve sometimes.

Balochistan

Balochistan is fast getting out of control,but no one seems concerned from the military and the politicians…we dont have much time at our disposal now, another 1971 seems to be in the offing…I dont think Pakistan can win this war through intimidation and fear…we are not that strong economically to sustain a prolonged conflict and there are many players involved in Balochistan…

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/MH12Df02.html

**Balochistan caught in spiral of violence
**By Amir Mir

ISLAMABAD - **The ongoing civil-military strife in trouble-stricken Balochistan, the most resource-rich but neglected and underdeveloped of the four provinces of Pakistan, has escalated to a worrying degree as a sputtering insurgency led by Baloch nationalists is fast turning into an all-out internal war between the Pakistan armed forces and the people of Balochistan. **

Balochistan has historically had a tense relationship with the central government, mainly due to the touchy issues of provincial autonomy, control of mineral resources and a consequent sense of deprivation.

**A recently-released fact-finding report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) stated that “The Pakistani security services are brazenly disappearing, torturing and often killing people because of suspected ties to Baloch nationalist movement”. Another fact-finding report by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) observed, “In the cases of enforced disappearance of the Baloch men which were brought before the commission, there were credible allegations of the involvement of the state security forces.”
**
**Both the HRCP and HRW are well-respected and reliable human-rights organizations and their reports have come as ethnic and sectarian killings in Balochistan are taking place with an alarming regularity, mainly targeting Shi’ites and Punjabis. The latter are allegedly being killed by Baloch insurgents who themselves are being hunted down by the security forces for their so-called “anti-Pakistan activities”.

Since June 2011, the bodies of over 170 Baloch men aged between 20 and 40 have been recovered from various areas of Balochistan. They are believed to be victims of the “kill and dump” operations being carried out by the Pakistani security forces, hence prompting the Baloch rebels to target Punjabis and Shi’ites in turn.** The killings have helped perpetuate a climate of fear, anger and uncertainty in the provincial capital Quetta, as well as the Baloch-dominated areas of the province.

Both reports highlight the issue of the “disappeared” Baloch people, more commonly known as “missing persons”, who are allegedly abducted by security agencies. The two reports highlight various dimensions of the violence that has Balochistan in its grip, including that perpetrated by the state, insurgents and extremist sectarian elements. On the other hand, **the Pakistan army has rejected human-rights organizations’ fact-finding reports about Balochistan as an attempt to destabilize and malign the Pakistani armed forces. **

**Released on July 28 in New York, the 132-page HRW report titled, “We Can Torture, Kill, or Keep You for Years: Enforced Disappearances by Pakistan Security Forces in Balochistan”, stated: “Several of those who disappeared were among the dozens of people extra-judicially executed in recent months in the resource-rich, violence-wracked province.” **

The report detailed 45 cases of enforced disappearances, the majority in 2009 and 2010. **While hundreds of people have been forcibly vanished in Balochistan since 2005, dozens of new enforced disappearances have occurred since Pakistan returned to civilian rule in 2008 following general elections in February. The HRW report is based on more than 100 interviews with the family members of disappeared Balochis, former detainees, local human-rights activists, lawyers and witnesses to government abductions. **

For the past few years, the number of missing persons in Balochistan has increased alarmingly. Tortured and bullet-riddled bodies of Baloch nationalists are often found dumped randomly. The victims are usually shot in the temple once. Known locally as “mutilated bodies”, the signs of torture are often hard to determine because many of the bodies have already begun to decompose when discovered.

According to HRW’s report:The inability of the Pakistani law enforcement agencies and the criminal justice system to tackle the problem of disappearances is exacerbated by the continuing failure of the Pakistani authorities at the national and provincial level to exert political will to address the issue of disappearances in Balochistan. The authorities have failed so far to send a strong message to the security forces and intelligence agencies and to implement a set of concrete measures that would put an end to the practice of enforced disappearances.
This is exactly what the Baloch nationalists have been saying for years. No one is willing to take action against the security forces and the intelligence agencies for the abuses being carried out in the name of “national interest”.

In its report titled “Blinkered Slide into Chaos”, and released on July 1, the HRCP expressed deep concern over the rapidly deteriorating law and order situation in Balochistan, terming it extremely precarious and calling for a political solution to the problem.

According to the report, the majority of missing persons used to eventually return home, but lately only mutilated bodies of victims of enforced disappearance turn up on roadsides and desolate places. The report mentioned 140 such cases from July 2010 to May 2011. A large number of bodies were of university students. The report also provided a detailed account of 143 missing persons in Balochistan.

“The figures are much higher than the reported cases and in many cases; families prefer to stay silent for security reasons. Even the lowest number is large enough to raise alarm bells,” said HRCP secretary general I A Rehman, adding that all authority in the provinces seemed vested in security forces, which enjoy complete impunity.

The HRCP report said that the agents of state, as well as Baloch insurgents and extremists operating in the province, shared a common disregard for human rights. “Insurgents have murdered settlers in targeted killings with impunity. A few amongst the Baloch nationalists tacitly condone these killings while others don’t condemn them openly,” the report said, adding that in a number of districts, large areas had been cleansed of “settler” populations.

According to the HRCP report, the provincial government in Balochistan is perceived to be powerless and irrelevant, whereas the civil administration, which is elected by the people and meant to represent them, has ceded its powers.

“The security forces do not consider themselves answerable or accountable to the government or judiciary, nor feel compelled to cooperate with the civil government,” said the report, adding that targeted killings on the basis of ethnicity and belief were rampant and those targeted included professionals such as teachers, doctors and traders.

The report mentioned the complete record of 18 such people who were targeted this year. Regarding lawlessness, the report said that it had proliferated at an alarming rate and brought normal life and economic activity to a halt.

Perhaps the most important part of the report is the HRCP claim that there is evidence about the missing persons with the relatives of missing persons, which implicates the security forces. The HRCP has urged the federal government in Islamabad to provide security to the witnesses of such incidents.

With a credible body like the HRCP claiming evidence of the involvement of security forces in missing persons’ cases, the myth is exploded that this is being done by some outside elements. The president of the Supreme Court Bar Association, Asma Jahangir, has already blasted Pakistani military authorities for claiming that whatever erroneous is going on in Balochistan, is the work of a “foreign hand”.

The genesis of the Balochistan problem
Almost prophetically, noted writer and scholar Abul Maali Syed, while writing on evolving scenarios for Pakistan almost 20 years ago, predicted in his book The Twin Era of Pakistan: Democracy and Dictatorship:Who would have believed that Balochistan, once the least populated and poorest province of unified Pakistan, would become independent and the third richest oil-producing country after Saudi Arabia and Kuwait? … Development in Balochistan was neglected and whenever a tribal chief spoke about the plight of their people, the Pakistan government shoved the barrel of a gun at him and silenced him. Today, having lost East Pakistan [now Bangladesh], Balochistan, Sindh and part of the Seraiki belt [in Punjab province], Pakistan is still entangled with Pashtun tribes on her northern border and is no more in a strong position to hold onto the Pashtun area much longer.
While this scenario is still far from realization, **a cursory glance at the Balochistan of 2011 clearly shows that the situation in this strategically important largest province - by area, constituting approximately 44% of the total land mass of the country - of Pakistan is following an ominous path, with Baloch nationalist violence escalating into what is becoming a major insurgency.

The law and order situation in Balochistan continues to spin out of the government’s control amid an ongoing military crackdown against rebel Baloch nationalists who are seeking greater political autonomy and a larger share of the revenues from the province’s huge gas reserves and other natural resources. **

At the same time, Balochistan is marked by a high rate of illiteracy, poverty and unemployment. Military operations and discriminatory policies of Islamabad have resulted in extreme underdevelopment. Balochistan is rich in mineral resources and the second major supplier of natural gas in Pakistan. Nevertheless, its share of the national economy has ranged between 3.7% and 4.9%.

The political, economic, social and cultural discrimination that Balochistan’s people are facing is nothing new and has been going on since the inception of Pakistan in 1947. **This discrimination has taken on even more sinister overtones in recent years, leading to a situation that existed in 1970-1971 that culminated in the dismemberment of East Pakistan, thus giving birth to Bangladesh.

Ever since independence, the Punjabi-dominated Pakistani federation has not been able to work out a comfortable and equitable relationship with its provinces. Whether it is Sindh, Balochistan or Khyber Pakhtunistan, local populations continue to be restive about what they see as the domination and control of the overwhelmingly Punjabi-dominated civil-military establishment.**

Over the past 64 years, Pakistan, which has mostly been ruled by military dictators since 1947, has not fully grasped the essentials of political management of the federal structure, preferring to deal with local issues by force.

Balochistan is located at the southeastern edge of the Iranian plateau. It strategically bridges the Middle East and Southwest Asia to Central Asia and South Asia, and forms the closest oceanic frontage for the land-locked countries of Central Asia.

The current armed struggle in Balochistan is not a new phenomenon. As a result of the colonial Great Game during the 19th century, the geographical boundaries of what could be loosely termed Balochistan - a region inhabited by tribes that accepted affinity to each other - were divided between Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Even after the creation of Pakistan in August 1947, following the partition of the sub-continent, the present-day Balochistan remained only loosely federated to Pakistan for more than a year. In 1948, however, it was formally annexed - against the will of the people of Balochistan. This discontentment at being forced to join the federation eventually led to three movements of independence.

The first of Balochistan’s armed movements was led by Karim Khan during 1948, which began soon after the area’s annexation. The second movement, led by Nawab Nowroz Khan, erupted in 1968. Both these movements ended quickly. But following 1971, Baloch tribesmen took a cue from Bangladeshi nationalists, who on the other side of the sub-continent successfully wrested their independence from Pakistan after years of disaffection.

The year 1973 saw the emergence of a major insurgency in Balochistan. Many Baloch tribes, primarily led by Marri and Mengal chiefs, took part in this struggle, which lasted for nearly five years. However, as had been the case with the earlier two, the third armed movement too was ruthlessly crushed by the Pakistan army.

As the relationship between the province and the rest of Pakistan, particularly the capital, has evolved over the past three decades (since the third armed movement was crushed), sentiments that motivated the three insurrections have sharpened further.

Following the step-up in violence in 2005 during the Pervez Musharraf regime, the old agenda of Baloch nationalists - that of “snatching more rights” from the central government in order to exercise greater control over the province’s abundant natural resources - received a serious hearing in the rest of Pakistan. **T****his was in the wake of the barbaric killing of the 80-year-old renegade Baloch nationalist leader, Nawab Akbar Bugti. Not only was his killing by the armed forces brutal, the order for his assassination reportedly came from Musharraf, then president as well as the army chief.

Akbar Bugti was not simply the chieftain of a 300,000-strong Bugti tribe of alienated Balochis. He was also a former provincial governor, a former chief minister and the moderate leader of a well-recognized political party - Jamhoori Watan Party. “It is better to die with your spurs on. Instead of a slow death in bed, I would rather prefer death come to me while I am fighting for a purpose,” said Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti in his May 2006 interview with TIME Magazine, conducted by satellite phone from the mountain refuge that eventually became his grave.

The octogenarian who wanted to fight to the death got his wish three months later when he was killed in a military operation in August 2006, making him the legendary leader of the Baloch freedom struggle.

Musharraf, who had already declared Bugti a terrorist, too had made no bones about fulfilling the desire of the rebel leader. In March 2005, he warned the Baloch rebel: “Don’t push us. It is not the 1970s. We will not climb mountains behind you. You will not even know what and from where something has come and hit you.”

While responding, Bugti stated in an interview with Monthly NEWSLINE in June 2005: “The general [Musharraf] has promised to hit us in such a way that we will not know what hit us. In one sense, it is quick death that he is promising us. He could do this to me, and to a few other Baloch leaders, but not to the entire Baloch nation.”

Bugti was not wrong in saying so. Within hours of his assassination, described by leading international human-right organizations as extra-judicial killing, Balochistan saw a bloody reaction, killing dozens and injuring hundreds.

Akbar Bugti’s assassination was the turning point in the latest Baloch insurgency. With his physical elimination, the military leadership may have thought they were ridding themselves of a particularly annoying problem.

However, it transpired that they only made things worse. Even today, many in Balochistan maintain that the reluctance of the Pakistan People’s Party government in Islamabad to take up the Bugti murder case by putting on trial the prime accused - Musharraf - could have serious long-term repercussions on Pakistan, especially when a martyr has already been born to inspire rebel Baloch nationalists in their ongoing struggle for greater rights and control over their natural resources. **

Independent analysts believe that resolving the Balochistan issue requires more than settling a single issue, such as the exploitation of its natural resources, the setting up of new cantonments, or the continuing hostility surrounding natural gas reserves.

**They believe that the use of brute force will only alienate the people further, leaving them with little option but to fight for economic and political justice. In his May 2006 interview with TIME, Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti stated a few months before his death: “We, the Baloch people believe that the best way to die is to die fighting. We Baloch are the masters of our own destiny. And if that is taken away from us, then life doesn’t really matter.” **

*Amir Mir is a senior Pakistani journalist and the author of several books on the subject of militant Islam and terrorism, the latest being *The Bhutto murder trail: From Waziristan to GHQ.

(Copyright 2011 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)

Re: Balochistan

The PPP led govt is trying their best to spread the Anarchy in Punjab, look at the news paper today almost all the leadership of PPP including Governor of Punjab is hinting for Karachi like situation in Punjab, for some reason PPP likes to divide and kill as many as they can... their 3.6 years of performance is there to prove my point... so whatever is happening i balochistan is because PPP is allowing it to happen..

Re: Balochistan

Greedy Pakistani political leaders will never learn.
All they care about is their ill-begotten personal assets and how to keep a hold on them.
They should be all put on a ship and deported to Kala Paani for life.

Re: Balochistan

After making one good post, you get back to talking nonsense again.

Has Balochistan been like this for the last '3.6' years???

Think before you speak.

Re: Balochistan

http://photos-d.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/283967_251610221525308_200118550007809_952815_20263_s.jpg

You are right but always misleading. This is very sure that this government is not performing well but no civilian government is allowed to interfere in the affairs of ‘World’s no 1armed business tycoon
You always use every painful situation against PPP. There was not much wrong in Baluchistan till you killed Bugti. This was the first direct message to Balochs that we can kill you without any sufficient reasons.
You have already given this message to E.P. by killing Sohrwardi,This message was given to Urdu speaking by killing Liaqat. You have given this message to Sindh by killing all Bhuttos. What else Zardari can do. He is now a part of your dirty business in your style.
I am one here who is always worried about Baluchs and you are the one praising these intermediate pass intellectuals on their foolish acts.
Thank you Ali_Syed for trying your best for Pakistan.

Re: Balochistan

After reading the statements by Jamshed Dasti, Babar Awan, Khosa the Governor about commencing agitation and armed movement in Southern Punjab, after the blood-bath of 40+ days in Karachi, i have reasons to believe that it is PPP govt who supports ill-doings against the people of Pakistan…

Whom do you think will die in that agitation and armed movement??? who will suffer more??? what the current govt. have actually did to improve things in Balochistan apart from announcing packages???the argument that army does not allow govt to do anything good in Balochistan has lost its weight…

Re: Balochistan

I agree with you. PPP is led by one insane and stupid person. He betrayed the people of Sindh who trusted him and gave thier votes. BECAUSE OF THEM HE IS PRESIDENT. I hope PPP should lose the next elections and kick that b@star d out of the party. He and his son, Bilwal Zardari, should run elections under mqm from lalukhet and naziamabad. Please leave PPP alone, blood suckers b@star ds. Bilwal Bhutto Zardari........

As once great Abraham Lincln Said:

You Can Fool All The People Some Of The Time, And Some Of The People All The Time, But You Cannot Fool All The People All The Time

Re: Balochistan

http://photos-d.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/283967_251610221525308_200118550007809_952815_20263_s.jpg

Let us forget these posts.
Please listen what Ali_Syed is saying.
My Baluchistan is burning and in fact my Pakistan is burning.
Forget all. First my Pakistan.