Insurgents suffer bloody reprisals

My heart don’t support this policy, but numbers are there to think twice. We should adopt the same tools with Taliban & Al-Qaeda.

Insurgents suffer bloody reprisals
http://www.dawn.com/2011/06/26/insurgents-suffer-bloody-reprisals.htmlQUETTA: A deadly campaign of killings in Baloch areas has driven a low-level insurgency in Balochistan further underground, curtailing insurgent attacks in the province but raising fears that a new generation of Baloch youth may embrace separatist violence.Since June last year, the bodies of approximately 170 Baloch men aged between 20 and 40 have been recovered, victims of the so-called ‘kill and dump’ operations.
The killings have helped perpetuate a climate of fear, anger and uncertainty in Quetta and in the Baloch-dominated areas of the province which have already been racked by insurgent violence and a surge in criminal activity as security forces focused on combating the insurgency.

The modus ope***** of the ‘kill and dump’ operations begins with security and intelligence personnel in uniform and plain clothes arriving in convoys of two to six vehicles outside the homes of victims or sometimes snatching them from nearby shops or roads.

A few days later — sometimes several weeks later — the bodies turn up in adjoining districts, dumped at a distance from the nearest road or population centre but in places where the bodies are likely to be found eventually. 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.
For most Baloch nationalists and human rights activists, the affiliation of the killers is an open secret: the Pakistani security forces. Led by the ISI and frequently assisted by the Frontier Corps Balochistan — though other agencies are also believed to be involved — the campaign of extrajudicial killings has occurred across Baloch-dominated areas in Quetta and in a vast sweep south towards the Arabian Sea.

The victims are often described in media reports as students, political workers, shopkeepers, government servants and labourers. However, security officials maintain there is a dark side to the victims: they are active members of the Baloch insurgency and are responsible for the deaths of civilians and security forces.

Since no extrajudicial killing has been properly investigated or successfully prosecuted, there is no legal proof of the security officials’ claims.

But in a series of interviews with Dawn in Quetta and other insurgency-hit parts of the province, security and government officials, politicians, journalists, area notables and locals suggested that the intelligence and security agencies have been conducting an extrajudicial ‘killing the killers’ campaign against Baloch insurgents since mid-2010.

All requested anonymity to speak about the deaths, with many outside the security apparatus expressing fear of reprisals from the insurgents.

‘Killing the killers’
**Perhaps the most notorious ample of an alleged insurgent eliminated in an extrajudicial killing is Majeed Lango, killed in an FC encounter in Quetta in March last year.

Reaction to Lango’s death was swift, with some Baloch groups and obscure websites condemning the murder of an ‘innocent’ Baloch. But security officials in Quetta tell a very different story, accusing Lango of being the Quetta commander of the Baloch Liberation Army and responsible for over 200 deaths in the city.

The officials’ claim was corroborated by several journalists and other officials familiar with the Lango case. “Look at all the areas and roads, Safdar Road, Brewery Road, Railway Colony, where the target killings of settlers were happening, you won’t find them happening” since Lango was killed, according to a veteran journalist.**

Inspector General of the Frontier Corps, Balochistan, Maj Gen Obaidullah Khan, when asked about the FC’s role in Majeed Lango’s death, said: “I have no problem with encounters as long as they are taking out murderers. Yes, a murder is a murder, but in your heart you feel less pain if a murderer is killed.”

A senior security official was adamant there was no other alternative to the extrajudicial killings, given the problems with the existing legal and tribal systems. “It’s nice to talk about principles and the state’s responsibilities, but I cannot ignore the pain” of the victims of the insurgency, the official said.

Decline in insurgent violence
The spike in killings by the security forces has mirrored a dramatic decline in the ‘target killings’ of Punjabi settlers who have been in the cross-hairs of the insurgents as a purported symbol of the federation the insurgents want to break from.

According to Muhammad Amir of the Balochistan Punjabi Ittihad, a group which tracks killings of settlers in the province, nearly 1,200 settlers have been killed so far, the vast majority in 2008-10.
“Things have been better in the last six to eight months with around 10-12 deaths being reported,” Amir claimed, adding that the exodus of Punjabi settlers from Quetta has begun to be reversed.

“Two hundred thousand settlers left Quetta since 2008 and property prices fell by as much as 60 per cent in some parts of the city, but nearly a hundred thousand have returned in the last year,” Amir said.
Insurgent violence has far from disappeared, though. “Violence is down, but it’s still a concern. Much more needs to be done,” IGFC Gen Khan said. In mid-June, a bomb attached to a motorcycle in Panjgur was detonated as an FC convoy was passing by, injuring more than a dozen FC personnel and killing three civilians, including two children.

Target killings carried out by insurgents of Baloch moderates — political workers belonging to nationalist parties like the BNP-M and the National Party — have also continued. On June 3, a National Party leader in Turbat, Nasim Jangiyan, was killed by motorcyclists who opened fire and fled. Jangiyan’s killing has been blamed on the Balochistan Liberation Front, which regards the popular BNP-M and NP as traitors to the Baloch cause.

An expanding range of targets?
**With insurgent violence diminished but extant, the extrajudicial killings look set to continue. In fact, some analysts privately suggested that the murder of Saba Dashtiyari, a leftist radical who lectured at Balochistan University, on June 1 may have marked the beginning of a policy to also eliminate political supporters of the insurgency.’

When asked about the allegations that Dashtiyari had been killed by the intelligence agencies, a senior security official responded defiantly: “Who owned his death? The BLA did. They put out statements eulogising him. Who was he close to? What were his politics?”
**
Multiple sources confirmed to Dawn that Dashtiyari, while never having taken up arms himself, was close to insurgent groups and at various times had exhorted violence against the state and other ethnicities living in Balochistan.
According to Shahzada Zulfiqar, a senior Quetta-based journalist, the purpose behind eliminating non-armed supporters of the insurgency is to “send a message to the Baloch population at large that anti-Pakistan sentiment and outspokenness will be punished”.

But Zulfiqar warned that the extrajudicial tactics being used to try and quell the insurgency could trigger a backlash. “If you turn up in a village and search 100 homes and take away 10 youths, you will earn the hatred of all,” Zulfikar said.Resentment against the security forces remains all too easy to find in the Baloch heartland.In Mangucher tehsil of Kalat district, a particularly violent battleground of the insurgency, a local recounted the words of the mother of a youth whose decomposed body had been brought home for burial: “The mother forbade anyone from crying. She said it was a day of happiness because her son would never be forgotten now.”

Re: Insurgents suffer bloody reprisals

Personally I don't support extra judicial killings from the forces or the extremists because it only increases the hatred amongst the people, its time that we to heal those wounds and attend to the genuine concerns of the people of the smaller provinces. Hard handedness doesn't work, maybe for a short term yes, but in the long run it makes the people skeptical of the state. Maybe terrorism has been reduced in balochistan but the students are not singing national anthem and the pictures of quaid e Azam are being taken off from the offices which is a dangerous trend. Seems like someone has not learnt anything from 1971.

Re: Insurgents suffer bloody reprisals

This is the dangerous part of this policy!

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Lets remember that the army was convinced it was killing the killers in Bangladesh too.

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Once killers are killed, fill the gap by deploying local police force with better incentives and responsibility to keep Law and Order.. followed by development work by the government, making sure that no one can take benefit by playing victim and people get busy with health business activities... failing to do so, this strategy may back fire...

Re: Insurgents suffer bloody reprisals

The thing is that development work wouldn't do anything unless the ground situation there improves. The baloch movement has gone down to grass root level now (students, offices, traders and educational institutes), the hatred amongst the balochis towards Pakistan is unanimous now. The operations and extra judicial killing will serve the interests of our enemies not Pakistan's.

Remember we have already gone through this in 1971 so it wouldnt be anything new for our army. There's a hadith "Momin aik sorakh say baar baar nahin dasta", but this does not apply to our army.

Besides who will carry out development work there? the development work in the tribal areas has been stalled now, due to lack or funds and other stuff. In counter insurgency the steps include clear, hold and then develop. We can discuss about the first two parts but sadly the third part is missing.

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That is what I've been saying all around, we don't need drones, drones fuel anti-state sentiments when so many innocents die with the bomb.

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In Balochistan, you have alternative to extra-judicial killings. In tribal regions, do you have a an alternative to drones? Had it not been for drones, Baitullah Mehsud and Ilyas Kashmiri would have been healthy and happily living amongst us. Isn't it?

As far as innocent killings in drone attacks are concerend, would you please give me a few words on thosed killed in bazaars and mosques in our cities and villages? Are they terrorist?

If tribal people want to stay safe, they must take care of their areas.

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the solution is to legitimize and legalize separatist parties and include them in the political system. there are plenty of parties in the modern world that advocate separation from federation... look towards Quebecois / Scottish / Irish separatist political parties for inspiration. Stop reacting with violence to demands of separation and give them a political avenue. And if they become popular enough in their province to become the majority, who are you to impose control over a people that doesnt want it? Whats the difference between us and India re Kashmir then?

In the short term, unfettered Punjabi migration should be limited. This is one of the major talking points of baloch nationalists, they compare punjabi settlers in balochistan to Israeli settlers in Palestine. So put a halt to that, until the situation there becomes less violent.

And most importantly, stop assassinating non-combatants. and stop extra-judicial killings.

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I think ALMOST all Baloch students should be facilitated to study in other parts of the country, ESPECIALLY in Punjab. People to people contacts should be increased to realign Baloch people with the rest of the country. And, national leaders, especially from Punjab, should interact more with common Baloch people and reqularly spend some time in Balochistan.

Re: Insurgents suffer bloody reprisals

Same tactics in tribal area’s too … :hmmm:

Gunmen kill senior Pakistani Taliban commander
http://www.dawn.com/2011/06/27/tehreek-e-taliban-pakistan-splits.htmlDERA ISMAIL KHAN: Gunmen riding in a car with tinted windows near the Afghan border on Monday shot and killed a senior Pakistani Taliban commander who helped train and deploy the group’s suicide bombers, Pakistani intelligence officials said.
Shakirullah Shakir was riding on a motorcycle near Miran Shah, the main town in the North Waziristan tribal area, when he was shot, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.
Shakir was a senior commander and spokesman for the Fidayeen-e-Islam wing of the Pakistani Taliban. He once claimed to a local newspaper that his group had trained more than 1,000 suicide bombers at camps in North Waziristan.
No group has claimed responsibility for his killing.

Re: Insurgents suffer bloody reprisals

If true, :k:

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Most of you sitting comfortably on your chairs have absolutely NO IDEA the kind of hideous crimes balochs hav carried out against punjabis and other ethnicities in balochistan. Either come live in balochistan and then pass judgements on the "innocence" of balochs or stay away and keep your myopic and limited views to yourselves.

Balochs have literally butchered thousands of innocent punjabis who had been living in balochistan for decades. Before the current intervention by pakistani govt, what used to happen was that baloch youth, given hindu indian money, arms and training hunted non-balochs as a passtime. For every non-baloch they killed, they received blood money from BLA. Properties belonging to non-balochs worth billions have been seized by balochs. Properties for which people had put in their sweat and blood were taken away over night.

To see an example of how "innocent" they are, there have been atleast three separate incidents in which baloch terrorists stopped buses entering balochistan, identified non-balochs and shot dead a dozen of them at point blank range. The cowards were particularly highly paid to kill technically skilled non-balochs like professors, engineers and doctors. This resulted in a complete destruction of the fabric of balochistan as most skilled people left balochistan. I mean the cowards killed a female urdu-speaking professor right at the gate of balochistan university. The poor woman was boarding a rickshaw and was shot by baloch in her neck. Blood gushed for half and hour and she died there, crying and praying for help.

BLA terrorists should be killed, no questions asked !!!!!

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I feel your pain, but i can't openly support the state terrorism on the name of law & order.

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Again, since we have “outsourced” the mercenary to US we are accepting drones as the only solution otherwise read the news below. Our government should be able to utilize “snipers”, “drive-by shooters” or “commando actions” against the TTP leadership, but that is if they really want to eliminate them.

Why are you taking my anti-drone stance as supporting Taliban terrorism? These two are mutually exclusive, you should know by now.

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^ I am exremely surprised to see that you still believe that our military establishment can cope with the Taliban all by itself. Extra-judicial killing may help in Balochistan, but your "snipers, drive-by shooters or commando actions" will not work against Taliban. They are thrashing us like anything for the last 4 years. And you believe that we are tolerating it all by choice? Buddy, when you talk about talking to them, it means you simply can't eliminate them. Can't you see it in Afghanistan? Get your thoughts in the right frame of mind.

I know what you are talking about, I have followed balochistan quite closely for the past many years. What you are saying is absolutely correct, but on the other hand the tactics of our military has driven all the voices which used to support it in the background. For me that's dangerous, like in the article that Firenze posted one professor has been killed because of his leanings towards the militancy although as such he was not a killer. If that's the criteria for killing them, then how many will they kill now as the tendencies of most baloch are anti Pakistan now.

Sorry I have read about Bangladesh. The same things happened there the bangladeshis killed punjabis and our army butchered them to a point where there was no one amongst them favoring Pakistan. I see the whole cycle repeating itself Allah forbid.

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Extremely sad incidents but the answer is not in extra judicial killings. Whatever cannot be regulated by law has a tendency of becoming an uncontrollable situation. Who to say that tomorrow ISI or some ISI agent is not going to use his authority to take personal revenges. No one should be above he law, be it army or Balochs.

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http://www.dawn.com/2011/06/28/a-recipe-for-failure.html

A recipe for failureBy Cyril Almeida | From the Newspaper

QUETTA: The state’s response to the latest Baloch insurgency can easily be summed up: bullets and rupees.

The extrajudicial elimination of armed insurgents and supporters of Baloch separatism by the security forces along with pouring record sums of money into provincial coffers for development and current expenditure represents a two-pronged approach to tamping down the insurgency.
**
Some security officials believe the approach is working. “Shops are reopening, property prices are going up, settlers are returning,” argued an official dealing with the military side of the state’s response.**

But others are not so sure. Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani suggested the downturn in insurgent violence is only a `lull’.
**
“The problem has not gone away,” Raisani said.**

Such thoughts were echoed by other security officials. IGFC Maj Gen Obaidullah Khan said, “All insurgencies have the same cycle. Violence goes up, then the state responds militarily and then the political machinery kicks in. But the political side just isn’t up to the task at the moment.”

Security forces vs civilians

It’s an old problem in Balochistan:** civilian officials claim the security forces** compound insurgencies by trying to quell them using violence; security officials claim corruption and incompetence of civilian governments undermine military gains.
In truth, both the security and civilian arms of the state are to blame.

Of the security forces’ approach, a local politician asked, “Say they eliminate all the militants; then what? If you have no plan for what comes next, you risk losing those areas all over again.”

Agha Hassan Baloch, central information secretary of the BNP-M, said, “The problem is the state still hasn’t understood what the problem is. It’s not just about building roads and drains and providing jobs. They need to end the military operations and go back to the barracks. Recover the missing people. Find out who is responsible for the dead bodies turning up.”

But civilian officials from the chief minister downwards suggest they have been rebuffed by the security establishment when trying to broach the issue of ‘kill and dump’ operations, the security forces’ violent approach to dealing with separatists over the past year.

On the civilian side, at present a significant part of the problem appears to be that popular nationalist parties like the Baloch BNP-M and NP boycotted the Feb 2008 elections, leaving the door open for relatively weak Baloch politicians. “It was a mistake. We were misled by Nawaz Sharif and then weren’t able to wriggle out of the boycott pledge,” a National Party leader said.

The outcome of that mistake is a provincial government immersed in the old tribal politics of Balochistan. “Nawab Raisani wants to make a difference, but the trouble is he’s got a weak team. And he can’t push too hard because of the problems with (Yar Muhammad) Rind, who will pull everyone to his side if Raisani demands too much,” said a local politician.

The powerful Rind, one of a handful of opposition MPAs in the 65-member Balochistan Assembly, is locked in a bitter feud with Raisani, whose father Rind is accused of killing.

Record provincial funds

Weak though it may be, the provincial government has massive, unprecedented resources at its disposal. According to Syed Fazl-e-Haider, author of ‘The Economic Development of Balochistan’: “Under the 7th NFC award, Balochistan’s share in the divisible pool increased to 9 per cent from the earlier 5 per cent. It also succeeded in getting Rs120bn in gas development surcharge arrears outstanding since 1954, which would be paid in annual instalments of Rs12bn.”

The result is a spectacular increase in funding for the province, with receipts and expenditure doubling between 2009-10 and 2010-11. Balochistan’s annual development programme for the last financial year clocked in at Rs27bn as compared to Rs13bn in 2007-08.

The spending spree is visible in Mastung town, part of Chief Minister Raisani’s constituency. Overseen by District Commissioner Noorul Haq, a dynamo of a civil servant constantly checking his BlackBerry or iPad, the town is set to acquire a Rs230 million hospital spread over nearly 30 acres of land, a massive education complex that will house everything from primary schools to degree-awarding colleges, a squash court, a town hall and sundry other multi-million-rupee development projects.

Yet, critics contend that many such projects are white elephants and dreamt up as vehicles for earning lucrative kickbacks.

With each MPA given Rs180 million as discretionary funds in the present financial year and Rs250 million in the next, the incentive to spend is high.

An MPA explained how the process works: “You don’t just get money to put in your pocket. It’s indirect and revolves around contracts. Say some business needs protection in your area. They also need to rent vehicles. So they rent the vehicles they need from you, but instead of the normal rate of Rs1,000, they’ll pay you Rs5,000.”

While buildings are relatively easy to erect — though skilled non-Baloch labour is often hard to acquire given the security situation — the problems of staffing and maintenance are harder to resolve. In Mastung, a resident complained that the existing hospital “has no MBBS doctors, no medicines, not even Panadol.”

At the local girls’ college, a state-of-the-art computer centre with air conditioning and a back-up generator has been completed recently. While pleased with the new facility, several students asked Noorul Haq, the district commissioner, to waive the Rs100-200 monthly fee charged by college administrators to keep the lab functional. Haq expressed surprise over the demand for a fee and promised it would be revoked. But it was telling example of the pitfalls that await new development projects.

Still, the spending does appear to be having an impact. In adjoining Kalat, a local, Mir Karim Lango, regarded the development spending in Mastung with envy. “Look around, we get nothing here. No schools, no hospitals, nothing,” Lango said. The Langos of Mangucher, Kalat, have an unfortunate track record of supporting losing candidates in elections, meaning they are frequently overlooked when it comes to development spending.

Even where development funds are being spent in Baloch areas, however, the harsh realities of life are difficult to mask.

Grinding poverty is all too visible among the adobe homes in rural areas and many parts of the small towns. In Mastung district (population: 200,000), the literacy rate for males hovers around 30 per cent and is under 20 per cent for women.

No will to change

In Quetta, too, the more subtle forms of Baloch marginalisation are evident. Baloch bureaucrats and police officials frequently complained of under-representation in the services. Zafarullah Baloch, the serving home secretary and, according to him, one of only two Baloch to have held the office since 1972, said: “There is discrimination in the services. Today, there is no federal secretary who is a Baloch.”

But as Fazl-e-Hyder explained, the problem is more complex: “The percentage of Baloch in federal services is nominal due to the province’s small quota (3.5 per cent), while it is larger than Pashtuns and other ethnic groups in the provincial services due to district-wise quota in provincial jobs.”

According to Hyder the real problem in Balochistan is that it is “short of professionals and experts. It lacks the institutional capacity and human capital to utilise its vast natural resources.”

Acquiring the necessary doctors, engineers, economists and academicians, though, would require a paradigm shift in how Balochistan’s elite regard their province and its people. But, as one analyst pointed out, the will to change is almost non-existent:** “The civilian government is happy enough. As long as the insurgency survives, money will pour their way. Why should they care?”**

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Theres also part II: http://www.cyrilalmeida.com/2011/06/27/dawn-a-weaker-insurgency-but-with-new-contours-by-cyril-almeida/