End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

Baluch fighters surrender in Pakistan

Sunday 16 July 2006, 16:06 Makka Time, 13:06 GMT

Hundreds of tribesmen fighting for greater independence for Baluchistan have surrendered to Pakistan’s army and begun disarming, according to a government spokesman.

An estimated 600 fighters, led by three commanders, agreed to lay down their weapons after talks with Shoaib Nausherwani, Baluchistan’s minister for internal affairs, in Dera Bugti district on Saturday.

The fighters were members of one of several groups in south-west Pakistan who are fighting for increased autonomy for the Baluch people, one of the country’s several ethnic minorites.

In the town of Baker, 400km (250 miles) northeast of Quetta, the rebels began surrendering AK-47 rifles, rocket-launchers and mortars on Sunday, government officials said.

Representatives of the regional Baluchi Government said the tribesmen’s decision to stop fighting would hasten the end of the revolt led by tribal chieftain Nawab Akbar Bugti.

On the same day, however, a bomb wounded nine people in a town close to Baker.

The explosion was a reminder that both the shadowy Baluch Liberation Army and the leaders of the Marri and Mengal tribes continue to attack the federal government and demand greater regional autonomy.

Baluch nationalists have been fighting the government for long

The province of Baluchistan is one of the largest and poorest in Pakistan. But it also contains huge mineral wealth and the country’s largest reserves of natural gas.

At present revenue from the region’s gas fields and from other natural resources goes to Karachi and is then spent nationally.

But tribesmen fighting for greater autonomy for Baluchistan want a greater share of this wealth to go to local people.

Baluchi fighters often attack government buildings and military bases. They have also blown up gas installations, rail links and electricity pylons as part of their campaign for more independence and greater political representation.

The Baluchistan region has rarely been completely peaceful. Baluch nationalists fought a full-blooded insurgency in the 1970s, and low-level violence has continued ever since.

The conflict heated up again last December after militants fired rockets at a Baluch town during a visit by President Pervez Musharraf. The army responded by using helicopter gunships to attack rebel areas.

Disappearances

A Pakistani para-military soldier guards a natural gas pipeline

Pakistani media has reported that many leading Baluch personalities and activists have disappeared in recent months after being detained by the security services.

Shahid Bugti, an aide to Nawab Bugti and a member of the senate in Islamabad, said that authorities have put him under house arrest in Quetta.

“A large number of police surrounded my house early Sunday and I was told that I couldn’t go out,” he said.

Bugti accused the government of not listening to the Baluchs.

“Just as in the past, they see Baluchistan’s problems with closed minds,” he said. “They don’t want to understand our problems.”

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

And some people were questioning the wisdom of sending in the army... results speak for themselves.

Pak Fauj Zindabad! Pakistan Paindabad!

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

It's a job well done indeed. Now let's focus our resources on building the dams, schools and ports in that region, please!

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

I ill be really surprised if this is the end of it..........But if Allah willing it is then Stalker you are right man......We must give them what we have held back from them for very long...

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

Yes, excellent. Now Balochistan will turn into a paradise. The sardari system will finish of, right? Oh that's right, now the old set of sardars will just be replaced by the new set of sardars who are pro government. And when these guys turn anti-government, they will become rebels and thus the cycle will continue like it has for 60 years.

But we should all be content that we are helping those backward Balochi tribals by giving them roads and ports when they don’t have enough drinking water and food. Paradise indeed.

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

what is your solution to solving the problem?

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

I've written many times in the politics and economics forum about a possible solution. Just check the threads on Balochistan.

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

You could retype it.

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

You could read it once and understand.

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

I hope Govt. creates job in balochistan for the people who just surrender.

So they would have as much money as they were getting paid from sardars.

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

Alhamdu'lillah.

This the second Balochistan insugency Pakistan has won. First one being the 1973-1978.

Pakistan Zindabad.

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

It's really great that we can defeat our own people in war.

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

Many countries has to do that to become secure.

Britain defeated the Scots
The United States of America defeated its own people in the US Civil war.
New Zealand defeated the Mauris.
Malaysia defeated the communists.
Oman defeated the religious rebels in the mountains.

The list goes on. Defeating your own rebel people is the grim reality of being a modern nation.

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

Those were different situations.

You should not just pick examples throughout all of time.

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

I feel for the Balochi people. I don't think we the rest of Pakistanis have been fair to Baloch people. While we have been sucking Balochistan dry of natural gas we have not invested fairly in its infrastructure. And so they are lagging behind in education and even lack the basic facilities that have become necessities for people in other provinces.

Also, I believe force is never a good option, rather our country should have dealt with this issue through dialogue no matter how long it took. Our military may have subdued resistance momentarily but the resentment in the hearts of people will stay long. I think using military force has further alieanated the Baloch people from the rest of Pakistan.

I grew up in Middle East where lot of Baloch people reside as well. I would often hear them say that Balochistan is a separate country and not part of Pakistan. They would identify themselves as Balochis and not Pakistanis. Of course I am not saying ALL Balochis were like that, at least the educated one's had very different views. But still there is a sizable population among the Baloch who had always resented Pakistan's failure to give them their fair share of development and progress. The present military action only reinforces and strengthens their resentment toward the rest of Pakistanis.

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

As a concept what you say makes a lot of sense. However implementation of your suggestions is pretty challenging.

  1. Infrastructure - Roads and rail links do exist. These should be improved with at least two East-West and North-South motorways. For this Blaochis have to gaurentte that they won't attack the road building crew.

  2. Infrastructure - Electricity, Gas, water, Telephone. All these must be improved via private corporations. No more Government run big name corruption boxes. For private corporations, balochis have to be more welcoming in the rural areas. Quetta does have decent phone (landlines + mobile) service. Electricity is pretty much the same on-off as in other parts of the country. Gas was a big issue. Quetta now has decent supply of gas.

  3. Education: Balochistan has decent university in Quetta. But there should be at least one like LUMS, and one like AKU. How do we make those two schools. I'd expect ex-PM Jamali to start fundraising campaign throught the country. I am sure people like Aga Khan and Syed Babar Ali Shah would be more than happy to set up schools.

Bottom like is that development is a 2 way street. Both Balochis and non-Balochis have to work on it. Balochis cannot sit around a camp fire while some magic hand will come down to put instant coffee, instant roads, and instant schools.

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

Yeah, and the solution is give Balochi sardars more resources, never keep any check on them and obtain a visa to enter Balochistan so that they can use all that money to buy more arms and fire at you. By the way, they start firing rockets to tell the government that their pocket-money is over. They don’t like telephones!

Did you never hear a father renouncing his son? It never pleases a father. But it had to be done some times.

Re: End of Baloch Rebellion in Pakistan

okay tell us whom these resources are for, Generals or sardars...
no way on both sides there are people in equation.

[quote]

Did you never hear a father renouncing his son? It never pleases a father. But it had to be done some times.
[/quote]

there is nothing like father and son relationship here , they were never treated by us like sons...
sui was producing gas and i guess for long time quetta didnt had gas untill cantonment was built there and derabugti also ...