By Anita
Joshua
February 29, 2012
The conspiracy of
silence over Balochistan is finally breaking but the alienation of the province
runs too deep for any easy solutions.
If Pakistan manages to
weather the crisis it is facing with the demand for an independent Balochistan
gathering steam, the nation may have to thank an American for it. An American
who is presently a dartboard for the political class and opinion makers of a
country that has mostly turned a Nelson's eye to this festering province.
What Republican
Congressman Dana Rohrabacher has succeeded in doing with his two interventions
on Balochistan in the U.S. Congress is break the conspiracy of silence in
Pakistan on its resource-rich but most backward, sparsely populated and largest
province which makes up for 44 per cent of the country's land mass.
Despite the perennial
violence, disappearances and the ‘kill-and-dump' phenomenon of mutilated bodies
of the missing turning up along roadsides frequently, Balochistan has seldom
been more than a footnote in mainstream discourse — in politics, the media and
elsewhere. The Internet, which gave the Baloch a chance to tell the world
what's going on in their land, has a limited reach in Pakistan because many of
these websites and blogs have been blocked here.
SIMILAR TO 1971
In fact, the
collective silence on Balochistan and the bid to paper over the sense of
alienation felt by the Baloch have been likened to the narrative that prevailed
in West Pakistan about its eastern flank ahead of the 1971 War. Through the
war, people were told via mainstream media that Pakistan's victory over India
was certain. Not just the media, even diplomats serving overseas were fed these
lies by the Yahya Khan dispensation, according to retired diplomat Tariq
Fatemi.
“A lot of media
outlets are compelled to opt for a blackout of news from the conflict-stricken
province because of pressure from the ‘higher authorities' who cite the
‘sensitivity' of the conflict vis-à-vis the national security paradigm as a
serious concern,” maintains Malik Siraj Akbar, editor of The Baloch Hal,
Balochistan's first online English newspaper. Mr. Akbar was recently granted
asylum in the U.S. after threats to his life. Needless to say, The Baloch Hal
is blocked in Pakistan.
Earlier this month, a section
of the media was shamed into breaking this orchestrated silence after a
shutdown of all Urdu channels by cable operators across the province. Sindhi,
Pashto, Baloch and Brahui channels were spared by the boycott call given by a
faction of the Baloch Students Organisation.
The floodgates opened
a week later, first with the exclusive hearing held by the Rohrabacher-chaired
U.S. House Foreign Affairs Sub-Committee on Oversight and Investigations on
human rights violations in Balochistan; and then, the resolution he introduced
in Congress seeking the right of self-determination for the Baloch.
An incensed nation
immediately saw Mr. Rohrabacher's twin moves as interference in its internal
affairs and wondered why the U.S. was silent on the Kashmiris' demand for
self-determination and human rights violations in the ‘Indian Held Kashmir.'
Suddenly Balochistan
was trending — to use a social networking term — all over Pakistan's media. Now
not a day goes by without at least a couple of talk shows on Balochistan.
Newspapers seem incomplete without a few articles on the province. This may
stop in the electronic media as the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory
Authority has threatened action against the channels airing programmes
featuring Baloch separatists.
How many withstand
this diktat remains to be seen but anger over the American intervention has
subsequently given way to some introspection as Baloch separatists living in
exile made it clear that the time for sops was long gone and they would settle
for nothing less than independence.
“What you read in the
Pakistani newspapers and see on the television channels is barely the
reflection of anti-Pakistan public sentiments prevailing in Balochistan.
Pakistan has failed as a state to resolve issues which matter a lot more to the
elite, such as the power crisis. No one is truly interested in Balochistan
among the rulers. The politicians can't fix it and the soldiers can only worsen
it.
“The real thing that
merits attention is the issue of demands. Many Pakistanis still do not want to
hear the real Baloch demands but the Baloch movement is not meant for
provincial autonomy. There is a full fledged movement for Balochistan's
independence taking place in the province. No matter what Pakistan provides
them this time, it is not going to help.'' With these words, Mr. Akbar sums up
what is being articulated by Baloch leaders from various locations. Such is
their anger now that they don't mind being labelled Indian/American agents. In
one television programme, Baloch Republican Party chief Barhamdagh Bugti's
retort to a question on whether he would take India's help was: “Why only
India? If satan offers help, we will take it.”
His is one of the many
voices for separation being raised in the province. Although there is no data
on how widespread the demand is, the separatists with their guns dominate the
narrative as the ordinary Baloch is caught in the crossfire between them and
the security forces. Given the frequency with which people are picked up,
tortured and killed — the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan report of June
2011 said tortured bodies of 140 missing persons turned up between July 2010
and May 2011 — more families were getting affected by this kill-and-dump
practice.
EMBITTERED BUGTIS
Though the Bugtis were
once pro-Pakistan, the murder of Akbar Bugti in 2006 and the public celebration
of the killing by the Musharraf regime embittered them. As opposed to greater
autonomy within the federation, the demand for independence began gaining
traction and several Baloch parties withdrew from the parliamentary process.
Conscious that the strategic location of the province will remain the bane of
their existence even if they get independence, so bitter are they now that an
uncertain future is preferred to remaining within the federation.
Most of them have
refused to participate in the All Parties Conference (APC) that the Prime
Minister is planning, and rejected the Interior Minister's offer to withdraw
cases if they return from exile or their mountain hideouts as “hogwash.” When
the government cannot get Frontier Corps — a military-headed paramilitary force
— to remove one check post from the province, asked Federal Minister Israrullah
Zehri, how can they withdraw cases?
Stating that the
government's offer [to drop cases against Baloch leaders] was good, Mehmal
Sarfraz wrote in The Daily Times: “But who is going to ensure the safety of
Barhamdagh Bugti and Hyrbyair Marri once they are back? The problem is the
government cannot save the Baloch leaders from the military. Let's not forget
what happened to the Baloch leader Nawab Nauroz Khan. An oath taken on the
Quran was violated by our military in his case.”
While mainstream
political parties of the province are not for independence, Asad Rahman — who
participated in the Baloch resistance movement in the 1970s — maintains that
they have been silenced by repeated betrayals, atrocities and continued denial
of rights to their resources.
A classic case is that
of gas which was discovered at Sui in Dera Bugti in 1952. It was piped to all
of Pakistan — foremost Punjab — from 1954 but Balochistan's capital Quetta got
connected to the pipeline only in 1985, points out Mr. Rahman.
According to him, the
genesis of the present resistance goes back to 2002 when Pervez Musharraf
handed over the Saindak project in the Chagai desert — with a projected annual
yield of 1, 44,000 tonnes copper, 1.47 tonnes gold and 27.6 tonnes of silver
for 80 years — to a Chinese company. While the company was allowed to keep 75
per cent of the profit, the federal government got the remaining 25 per cent,
of which just two per cent went to the province.
The development of the
Gawadar port near the Straits of Hormuz by the Chinese cemented the fear among
the Baloch that through this, the Punjab-centric establishment would try to
change the demographics of the province and turn them into a minority in their
own land.
Now the charge against
the Baloch is that they are targeting settlers from other parts of Pakistan but
the natives counter that proxies of the security establishment are involved in
these killings to justify their presence in the province. As proof, they cite
instances when killers of settlers have been caught and handed over to the
police only to be whisked away by intelligence agencies who have viewed the Baloch
with suspicion from the very beginning for their reluctance to join Pakistan,
resulting in four earlier rounds of insurgency.
But none of them
lasted this long. And those resistance movements were not for independence but
rights. Demand for secession is a bitter pill to swallow for any country, more
so for a nation that has been seeking strategic depth in Afghanistan at
phenomenal costs to itself to counter the Indian behemoth.
‘FOREIGN HANDS'
As always, “foreign
hands” are being accused of destabilising Balochistan with the aim to Balkanise
Pakistan. Challenging this, Alia Amirali, a researcher on the Baloch National
Movement, wrote in The News: “Rhetoric of ‘foreign hands' has allowed for further
militarization of Balochistan and given the military a licence to seal the
province and make it a no-go zone where it can abduct, torture, kill and
display bodies with impunity, extract Balochistan's resources under the barrel
of a gun, use Balochistan territory to conduct nuclear tests … There is one
thing, however, that the military in Balochistan does not control: the spirit
of the Baloch people.”
Source: The Hindu, New
Delhi
URL: https://newageislam.com/the-war-within-islam/balochistan-festering-wound-pakistan/d/6754