Among
the most pressing of tasks that currently engages the new regime in Islamabad
are the worsening internal security situation and the challenge of halting
Pakistan’s slide towards state failure. To that end, the coalition Government
headed by Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gillani has sought to initiate a
dialogue with an array of anti-state actors presently orchestrating violence
across the country. The strategic and resource-rich
Balochistan
province, which has long remained on the periphery of Pakistan's projects and
perceptions, is one of the theatres of conflict where "dialogue with
those who are up in the mountains" is presently unraveling.
Gillani
has stated that his Government is working for ‘national reconciliation’ and
has already ordered an end to military operations in Balochistan. As part of
a new strategy to bring peace to the conflict wracked province, a series of
‘confidence building measures’ (CBMs) have been initiated by Islamabad. Among
others, these include:
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During his visit to
the province on May 2, 2008, Gillani announced that no Army action would
be carried out in Balochistan until a strategy is formulated in
consultation with representatives of the provincial Government to deal
with the issue of law and order in the province.
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The federal Government
has decided to withdraw the Frontier Corps (FC) from Gwadar and provincial
capital Quetta and hand over the responsibility of managing law and
order to the Police in the two cities.
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The Government has
announced the withdrawal of cases against political prisoners and
ordered their release.
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The federal Government
has constituted two committees for Balochistan, one for missing persons
and the other for internally-displaced persons. (Kachkol Ali, leader of
the opposition in the previous Balochistan Assembly, claims that the
number of displaced people has exceeded 100,000, with children suffering
the most through an aid blockade imposed by the Government)
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The former Chief
Minister Sardar Akhtar Mengal was released from prison on May 9, 2008,
after Gillani asked the Federal and Provincial Governments to withdraw
all cases registered against him.
FC
troops were reportedly seen withdrawing from their positions on May 4, 2008.
FC sources disclosed that more than 600 FC troops had been withdrawn from 28
check-posts in Quetta, adding that about the same number of troops had also
been recalled from the Gwadar District. Sources indicated that the Chief
Security Officer of Gwadar, who belonged to the FC, had been replaced by a
Deputy Inspector-General of Police. However, officials said that FC troops
would remain stationed in troubled areas like Dera Bugti and Kohlu to protect
sensitive installations, including the Sui Gas Plant and the pipeline network
supplying natural gas all over the country.
The
truth, however, is that the Federal Government’s plans for Balochistan –
whether military, economic or political – stand in irreducible opposition to
perceptions of local interest among the people of the Province. At the
moment, there is little evidence of the insurgents’ responding favourably to
the proposed CBMs.
One of
the Baloch nationalist parties has, in fact, challenged the Government's
claim that military operations have ended. Hasil Bizenjo, Secretary General
of the National Party, told
Gulf News that "It is a lie that the
military operation has been halted in Balochistan." He said, though a
new Government has been installed, hundreds of dissidents and political
activists still languished in prisons and "torture cells".
"The military and paramilitary troops are still active on the mountains,
their intelligence networks are still operational and hounding people
struggling for their rights," he asserted. Bizenjo, whose party
boycotted the 2008 general elections, claimed that not a single political
prisoner has been released. "Only those cases of treason have been
withdrawn in which the Government had not arrested any people," he
stated. According to him, "More than 900 people are missing in Dera
Bugti District and more than 750 in its neighbouring Kohlu District."
Bizenjo insisted that he "did not understand" the reasons behind
the Government’s "false claims", when it has not even ordered
withdrawal of troops from places like Dera Bugti, Kohlu, Gwadar, Dilbadin and
Khuzdar.
The
Central Leader of the Jamhori Watan Party (Brahmdagh Bugti faction),
Nawabzada Jamil Bugti, son of the slain Baloch nationalist leader Nawab Akbar
Khan Bugti, stated, on May 5, 2008, that the arrest and trial of those
involved in Balochistan military operations, rehabilitation of internally
displaced people and immediate release of thousands of detained Baloch youth
are preconditions, if the rulers want to make the reconciliation process
result oriented. Refusing to hold talks with Senator Babar Awan, Secretary of
the Balochistan Committee set up by the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), he
contended that negotiations are possible only if a murder case is registered
against President Pervez Musharraf for killing his father and other Baloch
people, and Security Forces are withdrawn from Dera Bugti and other areas. He
expressed the hope that, in the present scenario, no Baloch leader would
engage in the reconciliation process, adding that they had a bitter
experience of surrendering arms in the 1970s. Addressing a Press Conference
in Quetta, he stated military operations were still continuing in Dera Bugti
and other parts of the Province. "We will not surrender our weapons
because it is against the Baloch tradition. We remember the fate of Nawab
Nauroz Khan Zarakzai and other tribesmen who were brought from the mountains
under oath and then hanged by Army ruler Ayub Khan in the 1960s," Jamil
Bugti concluded.
Nawabzada
Talal Akbar Bugti, another son of Akbar Bugti, has rejected Prime Minister
Gillani’s offer of negotiations conditional on laying down arms, saying
"that the Baloch people will only do so after they have achieved their
rights and gained complete autonomy."
Nawab
Khair Bakhsh Marri, a veteran leader and chieftain of the Marri tribe has
described President Musharraf as a "gangster with an ego," and has
also rejected the CBMs.
The
proscribed Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) has also rejected the Government’s
invitation for a dialogue. We regard the Government’s offer for talks as its
defeat, since previously it was not even ready to recognise the existence of
the BLA, BLA spokesman Beebarg Baloch said. The Government’s claims of
holding talks with Baloch insurgents are a "pack of lies" and the
new Balochistan Governor, Nawab Zulfiqar Ali Magsi, and Chief Minister, Nawab
Aslam Raisani, are "fooling themselves" by offering talks, the BLA
he said, on April 16, 2008, adding, "Neither has the Government
contacted us nor are we interested in talks."
Further,
Baloch political groups are claiming that the CBMs are mere hogwash since
"no cases have yet been withdrawn, no one has yet been released and the names
of the members of the Committee on Missing Persons have not yet been
announced. The Prime Minister also announced plans to replace 6,000 Army
personnel with the Frontier Constabulary, but the Army is there with its full
strength."
On the
face of it, it seems that the province has relatively calmed down after the
assassination, on August 26, 2006, of Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti by the military.
The momentum of the Baloch insurgency declined relatively in 2007, as some
leaders either fled Pakistan or were neutralized by the state. At least 450
persons, including 226 civilians, 82 soldiers and 142 insurgents, were killed
in 772 incidents in 2006. Violence in 2007 was at relatively lower levels,
with about 245 persons, including 124 civilians, killed in the year (
Institute
for Conflict Management data). Balochistan Inspector General of Police
Saud Gohar, however, said that terrorism and subversive activities increased
in the province by 19 per cent during 2007. About 186 people were killed and
445 injured in 540 incidents of terrorism and sabotage in 2007. He said that
the Police had recovered more than 1,000 weapons and 18 kilograms of
explosives during 2007.
According
to the
Institute for Conflict Management database, in year 2008 (till
May 9) approximately 78 persons had been killed and 242 others wounded in 188
incidents of insurgency-related violence in Balochistan. There have been
approximately 126 bomb blasts in 2008 (till May 9) in which more than 43
persons died and 215 others wounded. Through 2007, at least 332 people died
and 457 were injured in more than 125 bomb blasts.
Whatever
the actual figures may be, it is evident that insurgency continues to simmer,
and there has been a steady stream of bomb and rocket attacks on gas
pipelines, railway tracks, power transmission lines, bridges, and
communications infrastructure, as well as on military establishments and
Government facilities. The rebels are still capable of carrying out acts of
sabotage on a daily basis across the province and a political solution to the
insurgency is nowhere in sight. Acts of violence are, importantly, not
restricted to a few Districts, but are occurring practically across the
Province, including the provincial capital Quetta. Currently, all 27
Districts of Balochistan are affected either by a sub-nationalist tribal
insurgency or, separately, by Islamist extremism. Most of the violence in
Balochistan is, however, 'nationalist' and there is no co-operation between
Islamist militants in pockets in the North and the Baloch nationalist
insurgents. The shadow of Afghanistan continues to hover over Balochistan,
with (mostly Pashtoon) Islamist militants concentrated in the north of the
province, who are orchestrating violence on both sides of the Afghan border
in their areas of domination. There are regular reports of the presence of al
Qaeda-Taliban operatives in North Balochistan.
The
Federal and Provincial Governments undoubtedly face a challenging task. Chief
among the policy dilemmas is whether to abandon the military track altogether
or pursue a combination of both military and political initiatives. While a
dialogue with the rebels is imperative for the coalition Government in
Islamabad and military operations alone cannot bring peace to the province,
it is also the case that there has been a clear disconnect in the past
between Islamabad and the insurgents regarding a peace process. Considering
the intense animosity – enormously deepened by the military excesses of the
recent past – between Islamabad and the Balochis, it will take much more than
a partial troop withdrawal and unreciprocated CBMs to reverse course in the
Province and engage politically with the insurgents.
Underlying
the entire conflict is a crisis of faith. Islamabad has never trusted the
Baloch. And the Baloch find little reason in their history to trust
Islamabad. Worse, recent developments in the province have immensely
intensified Baloch apprehensions. Protests against the Federal Government's
acquisition of vast tracts of land for mega military ventures, such as the
Gwadar Port and City project, already feed the insurgency, and the Pakistan
Air Force’s (PAF) recent plan to take over 70,000 acres of land has caused
further furor in Balochistan. The PAF is reportedly attempting to acquire
70,000 acres of land along the Coastal Highway in the Lasbela District to
establish its new weapons’ testing and firing range. The previous Provincial
Government had reportedly allotted the land to the Defence Ministry at an
insignificant price of PKR 600 an acre. The Ministry, according to
Dawn,
had already paid approximately PKR 50 million and asked the provincial
Government to eject local people from their ancestral lands. While the locals
have refused to vacate the areas, contending that they had been living on
these lands since centuries, sources said the "firing range would also
adversely affect the Rs. 250 million National Hingol Wildlife project
launched by the World Bank." Criticising the action of the previous
Government, Speaker of the Balochistan Assembly, Aslam Bhootani, who was
elected from the area, contended that the land had been allotted to the
Defence Ministry at too low a price and without consulting the local people,
who were its real owners.
While
there is immense pressure on the Government to unveil a peace process in all
the conflict zones across Pakistan, for the insurgents in Balochistan, a
change in dispensation in Islamabad does not denote any modification of the
underlying sources and character of their insurgency. The new regime’s
initiatives are, consequently, not expected to change the dynamics of the
conflict in Balochistan.
A wide
range of entrenched discriminatory practices underlie this dynamic. Robert
Wirsing writes in
Baloch Nationalism and the Geopolitics of Energy
Resources: The Changing Context of Separatism in Pakistan (Strategic
Studies Institute, April 2008), that "when it came to jobs, for
instance, the gas industry’s well-paid managers and technicians were almost
invariably drawn from outside Balochistan; local Baloch, inevitably viewed with
some suspicion, were mainly employed in low-end jobs as day laborers…. An
obvious remedy for the shortage of technically skilled Baloch qualified for
employment in the gas industry – government funding of technical training
institutions in Balochistan – was never seriously considered until
recently."
Another
significant issue that Islamabad, the insurgents and other stakeholders will
have to engage with is how to alter the current fiscal arrangement, which is
evidently inconsistent with the concept of provincial ownership of natural
resources. As Wirsing notes, further,
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Baloch leaders have been arguing for years that turning
the situation around required, among other things, an overhaul of the rules
governing intergovernmental fiscal relations — including both those
pertaining to how the Central Government shares the divisible pool of tax
revenues with the Provinces, and those pertaining to how the provincial
share is divided up among the four provinces… As it now stands, revenues
are distributed among the provinces in accord with a strict per capita
population criterion. This formula finds favor in the Punjab, and to some
extent also in Sindh and the NWFP. It means, of course, that Balochistan,
with just short of five per cent of the country’s population, inevitably
gets a very small share of the pie. Possessing, on the other hand, 43.6 per
cent of the country’s area, with the unique costs entailed thereby, along
with an exceptionally low level of development, Balochistan, say its
advocates, requires a different distributional formula.
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Despite
significant agreement on the Province’s grievances against Islamabad,
however, unity continues to elude the insurgent movement. There was a measure
of expectation that some form of unity would emerge in the aftermath of Nawab
Akbar Khan Bugti’s – arguably the most powerful insurgent leader –
assassination on August 26, 2006. Islamabad’s counter-insurgency strategy has
also been a significant factor contributing to the disunity. Mass arrests,
long periods of imprisonment and assassination have complemented military
operations, resulting in a gradual and strategic decapitation of the
insurgents over the last three and half years. After Bugti was killed in
August 2006, Sardar Akhtar Mengal, former Chief Minister of Balochistan and
head of the Balochistan National Party (BNP), was arrested in November 2006
and tried in the Karachi Anti-Terrorism Court for alleged treason. Mengal was
subsequently acquitted of the treason charges in early 2007, but he continued
to be held in jail on other charges, until his eventual release on May 9,
2008. Another leader who was neutralized was Nawabzada Balach Marri,
purported chief of the Balochistan Liberation Army and one of Nawab Khair
Baksh Marri’s sons. Balach Marri was killed on November 21, 2007, along with
his bodyguards, in a clash somewhere inside Afghanistan, triggering
widespread violence in Quetta and other parts of the province. Mystery
shrouds Marri’s killing, as some reports suggest he was killed in Afghanistan
and others stated it was in Pakistan, while no confirmed identification of
the perpetrators of the attack is yet available.
Despite
the systematic elimination of its leaders, however, decentralization may, in
fact, emerge as an effective strategy for the Baloch insurgency, considering
its ability to sustain a significant threshold violence.
The
protracted nature of the Baloch insurgency makes it clear that Islamabad’s
overwhelming reliance on a military solution has failed. However, attempts at
political management have also failed repeatedly, particularly in the recent
past. For instance, findings of the Parliamentary sub-committee on
Balochistan headed by Mushahid Hussain in 2005 are gathering dust in
Islamabad. The political track has not found favour within the current
establishment either. Balochistan’s nationalist parties are reportedly not
keen to participate in an All-Parties’ Conference (APC), which the PPP
Co-chairman Asif Zardari has suggested, to resolve the problem. The February
2008 apology tendered by the PPP to the people of Balochistan, also, does not
seem to have had the desired effect. In its resolution, the party had stated:
"The PPP, on behalf of the people of Pakistan, apologises to the people
of the province of Balochistan for the atrocities and injustices committed
against them and pledges to embark on a new highway of healing and mutual
respect."
The
founder of the Balochistan National Party (BNP), Sardar Ataullah Mengal,
while terming the apology a positive but insufficient step, expressed a lack
of hope in the PPP being able to solve the insurgency. "The
civil-military bureaucracy has always called the shots here," he noted.
He and other nationalist Baloch leaders have indicated that the state of
affairs in Balochistan would remain unchanged until the "colonial
perception of the rulers" changed and basic issues such as provincial
autonomy were addressed. In a similar vein, Yusuf Khan Mustikhan, a central
leader of the National Workers’ Party, stated that a mere apology could not solve
the Balochistan problem and the "core issue of autonomy had to be
resolved in line with the expectations of the Baloch people." BNP
Secretary General Habib Jalib Baloch asserted, further, "The Baloch have
been cheated time and again by the Centre under the disguise of Parliamentary
Committees and APCs. We are tired of such measures which, at the end of the
day, do not yield any positive results." Baloch nationalist political
parties, dominant actors in the Province who had earlier boycotted the
February 2008 elections in the Province, have now unambiguously refused to
attend the APC.
A high
measure of euphoria and optimism currently attend the ‘democratic transition’
in Pakistan, and high expectations of finding rapid solutions to the multiple
insurgencies that currently afflict the country are widely articulated.
Within this context, it merits mention that during the Baloch insurgency in
the 1970s, it was Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, founder of the current ruling party
PPP, who was the Prime Minister heading one of the intermittent democratic
regimes in Pakistan, and he demonstrated little patience for concepts like
provincial autonomy and the human rights of the Baloch people. In fact, he
had refused to negotiate with the then Chief Minister Ataullah Mengal and had
also sent the military into the Province to brutally suppress the
insurrection.
Over the
past few years, the insurgents have unequivocally indicated that their
capacity to disrupt power and gas networks, and attack Government
installations at will, is not a mere irritant. Wirsing notes that the
demonstrably adverse impact of the Baloch crisis on the daily lives of most
Pakistanis grows larger with each passing day. In the absence of a radical
transformation of both the political and military approach in Balochistan,
the insurgency will certainly continue to simmer and, in certain
circumstances, has significant potential for escalation.