Oppression in Balochistan and its struggle for freedom

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Nationalists "Concerned" to See LeT, JeM Leaders in Baloch Districts


KARACHI/DALBANDIN: A central spokesman of the Baloch National Front (BNF) has expressed serious concern over the frequency of what it called visits by Punjabi Islamic extremist leaders and activists affiliated to the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Muhammad in Baloch districts.

A official statement issued by BNF said Punjabi religious fanatics belonging to banned groups like Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, and Jaish-e-Muhammad were regularly visiting from Lahore and Karachi to the Baloch districts of Chagai and Dalbandin.

"These Islamic extremists are linked with Pakistani spy agencies who come to collect funds and recruit fighters from Baloch districts in order to counter the Baloch nationalist movement," said a BNF spokesman. He said for the past seven days, the number of such visitors had dramatically increased which cast doubts in the minds of the Baloch nationalists about their actual motivations.

"We urge all the Baloch religious leaders not to welcome these Jihadi elements in Baloch districts." the spokesman warned, "they should distance themselves from these hardliners who come from Karachi and Lahore."

Nationalists “Concerned” to See LeT, JeM Leaders in Baloch Districts | The Baloch Hal
 

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Provincial negligence: No relief for Balochistan's victims

The government has not yet established a relief camp for flood victims in Balochistan, where hundreds of villages were washed away last month.


The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) has not sent a team to help out flood-affected people in Balochistan, said a senior official of the authority, Brig Sajjad Naeem.


"We kept our focus on Sindh because we have limited resources in case of a natural disaster," Sajjad said while briefing senators who met on Thursday to chalk out a strategy for providing relief to flood victims across the country.

Lawmakers are said to have raised Rs1.5 million over the last four days. Senators Dr Ismail Buledi and Ghulam Nabi Bangash criticised the government for "a discriminatory policy" and said it had failed to provide relief goods to victims of flash floods which destroyed 400,000 houses in Dera Allahyar and Rojhan Jamali areas in Balochistan.

"No single camp has been set up for flood victims"¦this is injustice with the people of Balochistan," said Buledi. Deputy Chairman Senate Jan Muhammad Jamali and Senators Rehmatullah Kakar, Abdul Ghafoor Haideri, Jamal Khan Leghari, Muhammad Khan Sherani and Wali Badini also called for immediate government support for flood victims in Balochistan.

Criticising the government for its slow response, lawmakers from Balochistan said why they failed to build a consensus about the distribution of relief goods in Balochistan.

Lawmakers also criticised National Assembly members for not focusing their attention on fund-raising for flood victims.
"MNAs just went home after proroguing the session," said Senator Bangash, adding: "They [MNAs] have nothing to do with the poor people facing the flood ravages in Sindh and Balochistan." NDMA officials informed the special committee that six million people had been affected by this year's flood. An amount of Rs69 million was allocated for development work this year.


Provincial negligence: No relief for Balochistan's victims – The Express Tribune
 

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A Baloch Perspective on the Problem

Malik Siraj Akbar's new book helps approach the issue in new ways, but stops short of outlining solutions or giving framework under which the Baloch liberation could take place



Balochistan is an important but complicated issue. The stability of the province is indispensable not just for Pakistan but also for its neighbours, other countries in the region, and for key world powers. But the problems with this resource-rich province are endless, and have been growing over time.

Malik Siraj Akbar discusses the factors that fuel these problems, how they are interlinked, and how they have worsened, in his book called The Redefined Dimensions of Baloch Nationalist Movement.

A prominent Baloch journalist and the founder and chief editor of Baloch Hal, Malik Siraj Akbar is also a Hubert Humphrey scholar and a fellow at one of Americas top journalism schools - the Cronkite School of Journalism at Arizona State University.

He attempted to answer many unraveling questions in his recently launched book, giving an echoing reference of the true conditions in the frayed Baloch land. From the strategic importance of the penetrable borderline this province de-margins, to the simmering sentiments of Baloch separatist insurgency, this book insightfully covers each heated debate that has rocked Balochistan's political, social and cultural climate for the seven most crucial years in its history.

The author has specially mentioned in the book that it is not meant for academic reference. The journalistic account records mind boggling information - news stories that are featured on TV one day but lose their importance and fall behind other headlines the next - from the two girls who were were attacked with acid by two unidentified men for not observing hijab, to the men who disappeared one day from a Baloch vicinity. Stories and accounts discussed in this book cover a massive array of topics that trouble this tribal land where freedom does not come easy for a common man, illiteracy is promulgated to keep population under control of the wayward feudal system, and the feudals themselves struggle for recognition by the federal government and other provinces.

The importance of this book lies in its discussion of where these issues originate - dis-empowerment, poor education and abuse of women, and the recruitment of children for militancy. The book establishes that the government, especially post-Musharraf, has deserted the province and the army and ISI have an overwhelming role, because of which the insurgency is now getting out of Islamabad's control. It shows why reconciliation efforts, like the 18th Amendment and the NFC awards, have been unable to stop the Baloch from pursuing what they call a nationalist movement.

The book makes revelations that allow new ways of approaching the mysteries that complicate the problems in Balochistan, but stops short of outlining any possible solutions to the problem, or even a framework under which the Baloch liberation could really take place. It is a great read nevertheless.


Report: A Baloch perspective on the Balochistan problem by Kiran Nazish
 

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Baloch Freedom Movement

Baloch Freedom Movement

 
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Pakistan's Bitter, Little-Known Ethnic Rebellion

Pakistan's Bitter, Little-Known Ethnic Rebellion


By CARLOTTA GALL

Bugti tribal militiamen in Dera Bugti in January. The Baluch insurgency has gone on intermittently for decades but has grown more violent in recent months.

GENEVA — A slim figure in a dark suit, Brahumdagh Bugti, 30, could pass for a banker in the streets of this sedate Swiss city. But in truth he is a resistance leader in exile, a player in an increasingly ugly independence war within Pakistan.

He has been on the run since 2006, when he narrowly escaped a Pakistani Army operation that killed his grandfather and dozens of his tribesmen in the southwestern province of Baluchistan. And since then, the government's attempt to stamp out an uprising by the Baluch ethnic minority has only intensified, according to human rights organizations and Pakistani politicians.

The Baluch insurgency, which has gone on intermittently for decades, is often called Pakistan's Dirty War, because of the rising numbers of people who have disappeared or have been killed on both sides. But it has received little attention internationally, in part because most eyes are turned toward the fight against the Taliban and Al Qaeda in Pakistan's northwestern tribal areas.

Mr. Bugti insists that he is a political leader only, and that he is not taking a role in the armed uprising against the government. He was caught up in a deadly struggle between his grandfather, Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti, a former minister and a leader of the Bugti tribe, and Pakistan's military leader at the time, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, over control of Baluchistan's rich natural resources and the establishment of military bases in the province.

Baluch nationalists have never accepted being part of Pakistan and have fought in five uprisings since the country's formation in 1948. Their demands range from greater control over Baluchistan's gas and natural resources, fairer distribution of wealth (Baluchistan suffers from the lowest health, education and living standards in the country), to outright independence.

When the Pakistani Army shelled their ancestral home in Dera Bugti in December 2005, Mr. Bugti took to the hills with his grandfather, who was 80 and partly disabled, and they camped for months in mountain caves. Then, in August 2006, the military caught up with them. "I escaped, but he could not," Mr. Bugti said.

From a hide-out two miles away, he watched the military assault, a furious three-day bombardment by attack jets, helicopter gunships and airborne troops. On the evening of the third day, the government triumphantly announced that Nawab Bugti had been killed. Thirty-two tribesmen died with him, Mr. Bugti said. The day after learning of his grandfather's death, Mr. Bugti gathered his closest tribal leaders, and they urged him to leave and save himself, he said.

Pakistan and neighboring Iran were hostile to the Baluch, and the only place to go was Afghanistan, though it was consumed by the war with the Taliban. It took 19 days, on foot, to trek from a mountain base near Sibi to the Afghan border. But he had an armed tribal force and scouts with him and made the escape without incident, crossing into Afghanistan along a mountain trail, he said.

Although he had few contacts there, tribal links and traditions of hospitality assured him a welcome. He sent for his wife, his two children — a third was born in Afghanistan — and his mother, and after an elaborate dance to confuse government watchers, they crossed the border to join him days later.

Yet Afghanistan was not a safe haven. The family moved about 18 times over the next 18 months, and despite never going outside, he said, they became the target of repeated suicide bomb attacks by the Taliban and Qaeda militants, who they believe were sent by the Pakistani military. At least one bomb attack, in the upscale residential Kabul neighborhood of Wazir Akbar Khan, was specifically aimed at Mr. Bugti, a Western diplomat and an Afghan intelligence official said.

The Pakistani government has branded Mr. Bugti a terrorist, the leader of the militant Baluch Republican Army, and has made no secret of its desire to kill or capture him. It has repeatedly demanded that Afghanistan hand him over and has accused India of supporting Baluch rebels through its consulates in Afghanistan.

Pakistan's remonstrations over Mr. Bugti became so insistent that the United States and other NATO members urged Afghanistan to move Mr. Bugti elsewhere, Western diplomats and Afghan officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the politics involved. In October 2010, he and his family arrived in Switzerland and sought political asylum.

Though Mr. Bugti says he supports only peaceful political activism rather than armed resistance, he does share the rebels' demand for independence for the Baluch. "I support the political struggle and the idea for liberation because the Baluch people demand it," he said.

He formed a political party shortly after his grandfather's death, distancing himself from the established parties. The manner of his grandfather's death, his call for political opposition to the government and his youth have won him broad support beyond his own Bugti tribe, among the educated Baluch middle class and student movements and appointed representatives in every district.

"We got a very good response from all the Baluch," he said.

It proved to him that people in Baluchistan still hoped and believed in political change, he said. Yet government retribution was swift. Eight members of his political party in Baluchistan have been killed, five members of its central committee are missing since its formation in 2007 and the top leaders have been forced into exile. Even the party's 76-year-old secretary general, Bashir Azeem, was detained for two months in 2009 and tortured — including being beaten and hung upside down, in a case documented by Human Rights Watch.

It is part of an increasingly deadly government crackdown on political and student nationalist leaders in the province over the last 18 months, politicians and human rights officials say. "They are trying to kill the activists, anyone who is speaking out," Mr. Bugti said.

Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have documented a rising number of abuses by the Pakistani security forces in Baluchistan. Amnesty International describes the use of "kill and dump" tactics, under which activists, teachers, journalists and lawyers, even teenagers, have been detained and their bullet-ridden bodies dumped on roadsides at a rate of about 20 a month in recent months.

Human Rights Watch says hundreds of people have disappeared since 2005 in Baluchistan, and it has documented 45 cases of enforced disappearances and torture by Pakistani security forces in the province in 2009 and 2010. Human Rights Watch has also reported a growing trend of retaliation by armed rebels on non-Baluch settlers, including the targeted killings of 22 teachers.

Despite the end of General Musharraf's rule and Pakistan's return to a democratic government in 2008, military repression of the Baluch has only increased, Mr. Bugti and others say. Members of the civilian government say they have no power over the military, and the army is obsessed with crushing an uprising that it sees as an effort by India to undermine Pakistani sovereignty.

Mr. Bugti has called on the United States to end aid to the Pakistani Army, which, he said, was diverting resources from intended counterterrorism goals and using them to suppress the Baluch. "If the U.S. stopped the military and financial assistance, they could not continue their operations for long," he said.

The increased violence has pushed the Baluch far beyond their original demands for greater autonomy and recognition of their rights and toward an armed independence movement. "Ninety-nine percent of the Baluch now want liberation," Mr. Bugti said.

"The people are more angry and they will go to the side of those using violence, because if you close all the peaceful ways of struggle, and you kidnap the peaceful, political activists, and torture them to death and throw their bodies on roadsides, then definitely they will go and join the armed resistance groups," he said.

He sees little hope of change from within Pakistan and seeks intervention by the United Nations and Western nations. "We have to struggle hard, maybe for 1 year, 2 years, 20 years," he said. "We have to hope."


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/24/world/asia/24baluch.html?_r=1&scp=10&sq=pakistan&st=cse
 

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Balochistan situation going from bad to worse, says HRCP

Balochistan situation going from bad to worse, says HRCP

September 18, 2011

* Commission expresses concern over growing incidents of decomposed bodies of missing persons being found in province

By Mohammad Zafar

QUETTA: Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) Balochistan chapter, on Saturday, expressed its serious concern over the increasing number of decomposed bodies of missing persons being recovered from different parts of Balochistan.

HRCP Quetta chapter Chairman Tahir Hussain Advocate and Zahoor Shahwani, while addressing a news conference, said that situation was going from bad to worse in the province, as security personnel themselves were not secure from attacks.
They said that most of the people did not come forward to record their statements out of fear. "The hoardings displayed in Hindu dominated areas of the province demanding security for members of the community reflect the state of lawlessness and prevailing sense of fear," they told the reporters.

They said the number of mutilated dead bodies of missing persons was increasing with each passing day. "Around 188 decomposed dead bodies have so far been dumped in desolate places in different parts of Balochistan since June 4, 2010," they said, adding, "Most of the victims were political opponents, students and cream of the society." Quoting a report, they said that those lawyers who appeared before courts in connection with the cases of missing persons were also killed. HRCP council member Zahoor Shahwani said the Commission had set up a special cell for collecting evidence and documents about persons who were whisked away by the authorities. "Around 12 families submitted documents relating to the disappearances of their loved ones," he said, adding, "Those who resurfaced later on or were freed are reluctant to record their statements in courts."

He said petitions were also filed in the Supreme Court, Balochistan High Court and other courts regarding enforced disappearances, and immediate steps were desperately needed to resolve the issue. It is pertinent to mention here that the interior minister claimed merely 44 people were missing in Balochistan, while, on the contrary, relatives of Baloch missing persons say they have complete data about 1,300 missing persons.

HRCP office bearers demanded the government to seek political solution to problems of Balochistan instead of using brute force. "Issues are political in nature, thus negotiations must be held with the stakeholders," they asserted. According to the HRCP, 83 people, including teachers, political leaders and policemen, were killed in 50 incidents of target killings this year while 58 persons lost their lives and 74 were injured in 58 bomb blasts.

Around 26 incidents of kidnapping for ransom took place in Balochistan in which two persons were killed and five Hindus were released after paying ransom.

HRCP has expressed its serious concern over the recovery of bullet-riddled corpses of missing persons and said such kinds of actions were condemnable. HRCP has criticised the government for not taking any action or arresting any person responsible for abducting, killing and maiming people.

According to the HRCP, even the personnel of law-enforcement agencies are not safe any more from attacks by miscreants.
"Minority members confront kidnappings and forced marriages," HRCP members said.

They said that even people of the Hindu community had now stopped sending their children to schools due to lack of security. "Traders, doctors and even retailers are being kidnapped or threatened," said Tahir Hussain.


Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 

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Brahumdagh Bugti seeks UN, Western intervention in Balochistan

Brahumdagh Bugti seeks UN, Western intervention in Balochistan

GENEVA (INP) - The grandson of Nawab Akbar Bugti, Brahumdagh Bugti, has insisted that he is a political leader only and playing no role in the armed uprising against the government in Balochistan.

In an interview published in the New York Times on Wednesday, Brahumdagh, who fled Pakistan to Afghanistan and then to Switzerland, said he supported only peaceful political activism rather than armed resistance. He, however, said he did share the rebels demand for independence for the Baloch.

"I support the political struggle and the idea for liberation because the Baloch people demand it," he said.

He has been on the run since 2006, when he narrowly escaped a Pakistani Army operation that killed his grandfather and dozens of his tribesmen in the southwestern province of Balochistan.

Bugti insisted he was caught up in a deadly struggle between his grandfather, Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti, a former governor and a leader of the Bugti tribe, and Pakistan's military leader at the time, Gen Pervez Musharraf, over control of Balochistan's rich natural resources and the establishment of military bases in the province. Though Bugti says he supports only peaceful political activism rather than armed resistance, he does share the rebels' demand for independence for the Baloch. He formed a political party shortly after his grandfather's death, distancing himself from the established parties.

Bugti said eight members of his political party in Balochistan had been killed, five members of its central committee were missing since its formation in 2007 and the top leaders had been forced into exile. Even the party's 76-year-old secretary general, Bashir Azeem, was detained for two months in 2009 and tortured - including being beaten and hung upside down, in a case documented by Human Rights Watch, he said. When the Pakistani Army shelled their ancestral home in Dera Bugti in December 2005, Bugti took to the hills with his grandfather, who was 80 and partly disabled, and they camped for months in mountain caves. Then, in August 2006, the military traced them. "I escaped, but he could not," Bugti said.

From a hide-out two miles away, he watched the military assault, a furious three-day bombardment by attack jets, helicopter gunships and airborne troops. On the evening of the third day, the government triumphantly announced that Nawab Bugti had been killed. Some 32 tribesmen died with him, Bugti said. The day after learning of his grandfather's death, Bugti gathered his closest tribal leaders, and they urged him to leave and save himself, he said. Pakistan and neighboring Iran were hostile to the Baloch, and the only place to go was Afghanistan, though it was consumed by the war with the Taliban. It took 19 days, on foot, to trek from a mountain base near Sibi to the Afghan border. But he had an armed tribal force and scouts with him and made the escape without incident, crossing into Afghanistan along a mountain trail, he said.

Although he had few contacts there, tribal links and traditions of hospitality assured him a welcome. He sent for his wife, his two children - a third was born in Afghanistan - and his mother, and after an elaborate dance to confuse government watchers, they crossed the border to join him days later.

Yet Afghanistan was not a safe haven. The family moved about 18 times over the next 18 months, and despite never going outside, he said, they became the target of repeated suicide bomb attacks by the Taliban and Qaeda militants, who they believed were sent by Pakistan. At least one bomb attack, in the upscale residential Kabul neighborhood of Wazir Akbar Khan, was specifically aimed at Bugti, a Western diplomat and an Afghan intelligence official said. Bugti has called on the United States to end aid to the Pakistani Army, which, he said, was diverting resources from intended counterterrorism goals and using them to suppress the Baloch. "If the US stopped the military and financial assistance, they could not continue their operations for long," he said.

The increased violence has pushed the Baloch far beyond their original demands for greater autonomy and recognition of their rights and toward an armed independence movement. "Some 99 per cent of the Baloch now want liberation," Bugti said.
"The people are more angry and they will go to the side of those using violence, because if you close all the peaceful ways of struggle, and you kidnap the peaceful, political activists, and torture them to death and throw their bodies on roadsides, then definitely they will go and join the armed resistance groups," he said.

He sees little hope of change from within Pakistan and seeks intervention by the United Nations and Western nations. "We have to struggle hard, may be for one year, two years, 20 years," he said. "We should be hopeful."


Brahumdagh Bugti seeks UN, Western intervention in Balochistan | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online
 

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Balochistan : The right to self determination

Balochistan : The right to self determination

A new country has been born as South Sudan gains its independence, ending decades of conflict. At least 1.5 million people are believed to have been killed in two civil wars there, but in the end it was a referendum that finally brought peace.

It is time now for Pakistan to deal with its own 'South Sudan'. There have been five uprisings in Balochistan since it was annexed by Pakistan in 1948. The current insurgency has been the most protracted and has seen the conflict spread from the tribal regions of the territory to the settled districts in the south. Whereas the leadership of the Baloch nationalist movement was once dominated by tribal leaders, today a new breed of insurgents is taking centre-stage: educated, middle class cadres, many of them alumni of the Baloch Students Organisation (Azad), such as guerilla commander Dr Allah Nazar Baloch.

For this new breed, the conflict in Balochistan is one of colonial occupation. They see their movement as being one among other historical liberation struggles around the world like those of Ireland, Angola or Palestine. Similar to South Sudan, the insurgents originally were mainly seeking political rights and autonomy within a federal structure, but today the idea of outright secession is arguably the predominant goal within the Baloch nationalist discourse.

Indeed, go to any music store in Karachi's Lyari neighbourhood and you will be able to buy CDs of singers singing poetry about an independent Balochistan and lionising the guerrila fighters. The owner of one the largest Baloch music production houses (himself a Pashtun) told me last year that if a Baloch album doesn't have at least one or two "inquilaabi" songs, it doesn't sell well.

Online videos of protest rallies in Balochistan show thousands of demonstrators chanting "Pakistan murdabad" and "Azaad Balochistan zindabad". It is common to see buildings in Baloch areas spray-painted with phrases like "Watan ya kafan". We can bury our heads in the sand for as long as we want, but the writing is, quite literally, on the wall.

For many patriotic Pakistanis, these images are tantamount to sacrilege and they would argue that the state is justified in using any means to silence any talk of self-determination. They claim that these separatist views are held by just an extremist minority faction among the Baloch, who are backed by India and/or Israel and the US. But regardless of whether we like it or not, the reality is that azaadi is today a widespread and mainstream idea among the Baloch that cannot be ignored.

However, there has recently been a rise in sympathy for the Baloch cause in Pakistan.
Whenever news breaks of the extra-judicial murder of a Baloch nationalist figure, it sparks momentary calls from mainstream Pakistani leaders and commentators to address the causes of anger in Balochistan. They identify the right issues, but the calls for addressing these issues are prefaced with the phrase 'if we want to save Balochistan from breaking away', or 'if we want to prevent a repeat of East Pakistan'. The underlying assumption in that argument is that addressing the human rights issues of Balochistan is simply a means to prevent its secession.

But surely these human rights issues need to be addressed not merely as a means to an end, but because they are human rights. And in this same light, we must go one step further and be willing to accept that the principle of self-determination is a right for the Baloch people as much as it is a right for the people of South Sudan, Kashmir, Palestine, or it was when Pakistan was created as an independent state.

Of course, it would be idealistic to expect the power holders of the Pakistani state to all of a sudden start putting what is 'right' before their own political and material interests. But we can, at the very least, bring a rights-based approach (including the right to self-determination) into the discourse of how to resolve the Balochistan conflict.

This does not mean that everyone should suddenly start calling for the immediate secession of the territory. Rather, the very real demand for self-determination should stop being childishly treated as an unspeakable taboo, and should be evaluated seriously and honestly along with the other demands.


The right to self-determination – The Express Tribune
 

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Bodies of two Baloch students found, a member of BNM and a Baloch journalist abducted - News - News - BALOCHWARNA
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security forces are continuing with arbitrary
arrests and extra judicial killings. The bullet riddled
bodies of two Baloch students were found in
Mastung and Khuzdar. Pakistani intelligence
agencies have also abducted a member of the
Baloch National Movement (BNM) and a Baloch
Journalist.
The Decomposed dead body of a BSO-Azad
activist with 14 bullet wounds was found in
Mastung district, Balochistan. According to Levies,
they found the body at Naushki Road near
Khushak area late Saturday night. The body was
shifted to the Civil Hospital, where he was
identified as 19-year-old Kaleemullah, an activist of
BSO-Azad Mastung Zone. "He received 14 bullets
on his body, three in his head and 11 on different
parts of his body," hospital sources confirmed.
Kaleem Baloch was kidnapped from Satellite
Town area of Quetta on August 25 by Pakistani
military and intelligence agencies.
Separately, the body of another Baloch activist
was found from Sunni area of the Khuzdar
district, around 300 kilometers away from
Quetta, on Friday. According to local police, some
passers-by spotted the body lying in a deserted
place and informed the local authorities. Police
reached the spot and shifted the body to the
District Headquarters Hospital, where it was
identified as that of Khalil Ahmed, a student of
Khuzdar Degree College. "The body was partially
decomposed and bore torture marks and bullet
wounds," sources in the hospital said.
HUB: The finance secretary of BNM (Baloch
National Movement) and a Baloch Journalist/
columnist were abducted by the Pakistani
intelligence agencies from Hub industrial town of
Balochistan. According to details, the BNM central
finance secretary Abdul Samad Tagrani was
abducted by the armed men of Pakistan military
and intelligence agencies in front of Zahid Medical
Store in Hub town. According to the local sources
the abductors were in two vehicles and were
uniformed.
Meanwhile a Baloch journalist/columnist Jawed
Naseer Rind has also been abducted on same
night about 9 Pm by Pakistani intelligence
agencies from his Computer IT shop situated in
Hub town. Eye-witnesses reported the abductors
came in two cars and ransacked Mr. Rind's shop.
Jawed is a local journalist associated with
DailyTawar, a Balochistan based Urdu language
newspaper. It pertinent to mention that in recent
Past Pakistani intelligence agencies and their hired
death squads target killed and abducted several
Baloch journalists.
The family of Jawed Rind Baloch fears that he
might suffer the same fate as other Baloch
journalists by Pakistani security forces. The
victims' families have appealed to the international
Human Rights organizations and Reporters
Without Borders for the safe and early recovery
of their loved ones.
 

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Pakistan's dirty war against Baloch people: Four female teachers injured in acid attack - News - News - BALOCHWARNA
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Occupied Balochistan:-

Four female teachers of a
private school were attacked with acid by unknown culprits in Killi Alam area of Saryab here on Saturday.
According to local police officer Malik Arshad, the
female teachers were sitting in a van outside their
school in Killi Alam on Saryab Road when two
men on motorbikes hurled acid and fled from the
scene. Three teachers, in early 20s, received burn
injuries on their face, hands and legs while
clothes of another teacher were burnt. The
victims were identified as Robina Mushwani, 21,
Fazila Bangulzai, 23, Sajida Bibi, 24 and 21-year-
old Surriya Langhov. Sajida Bibi was discharged
after being provided first aid.
"We were sitting inside the van outside of our
school when two persons on motorbike
appeared and the hurled acid. The attackers were
wearing masks and disappeared from the scene,"
one of the injured Fazila told the doctors at Bolan
Medical College Hospital.
The victims were admitted at Plastic Surgery and
Burns Wounds Department at BMC that was
crowded with their relatives. One of the eye
witnesses claimed that the culprits had hurled a
bottle containing deadly acid on the four female
teachers. Dr Allah Bakhsh told the Express
Tribune that the victim Rubina received 8 per cent
burn injuries in her face and hands, Surriya 3.4
per cent while Fazila sustained 2 per cent
wounds. "All the patients are stable and admitted
to the ward. We have discharged Sajida Bibi
whose merely clothes were burnt," said Dr Allah
Bakhsh.
Police have taken the driver into custody for
interrogation. They have also mounted a
manhunt in the area and detained several people
for questioning.
According to relatives, they had not received any
threat. "The van was parked outside the skillful
Grammar School as usually and ready to drop
the teachers to their respective areas," said
Saleem, relative of one of the victims.
It was the third incident in Balochistan during the
past 15 months as earlier three women were
attacked with acid in Kalat while two sisters
sustained burn injuries in Dalbandin. Later, ISI /
MI created new dummy organizations claimed
the responsibility and warned the female not to
move out in Bazaars, do not work outside and
don't participate in any protest rally or seminars.
It is generally presumed that religious fanatics
supported by the state's intelligence agencies are
involved in the acid attacks because they want to
spread panic among the Baloch female teachers
and Baloch women who are playing a vital role in
Balochistan's independence movement.
Baloch resistance Organiations and leaders of
Baloch Nationalist political parties and student
Organisatons had strongly condemned the attack
on Baloch sisters in Daalbandin and Kalat. They
had termed such attacks a dirty game of the state
agencies against the secular Baloch society.
Courtesy: DailyBalochistanexpress
 

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The failure in Balochistan

Days before the completion of President Asif Ali Zardari's three years in office, Senator Lashkari Raisani, the former provincial president of the ruling Pakistan People's Party (PPP), disclosed that at least one senior leader among the disillusioned Baloch nationalists had reached out to him offering "unconditional reconciliation" with the government.

The nationalist leader, whose name Senator Raisani did not divulge, had formerly supported the ongoing insurgency and advocated the cause of an independent Balochistan. Now, he had reposed his absolute faith in the PPP's reconciliation process, he claimed.

While Raisani, whose elder brother Aslam Raisani is the chief minister of Balochistan, asked the central government to support him in his interactions with Baloch nationalists, he also warned of a fallout if Islamabad did not respond encouragingly to the fresh overtures.

"It is not as if the PPP did not take some bold initiatives in Balochistan, given its own limited space in the country's political culture where the military dominates and aggressively monitors every development in the province from the lens of national security"

"I am going to talk to Prime Minister Gilani to seek his support for my discussions with the nationalists," he said at a press conference in Quetta. But "if the federal government does not support our efforts to reconcile with Baloch leaders to restore peace in the province, then we will also be compelled to take to the hills," he warned. It is a warning one hears frequently from Balochistan's moderate politicians, showing they do have the option of joining or supporting the ongoing armed struggle against Islamabad for the province's rights.

According to Senator Raisani, Interior Minister Rehaman Malik, who "threatens to use force in Balochistan but offers reconciliation in Sindh", is an obstacle to the dialogue process. "When the Baloch express valid grievances against the federal government, Islamabad calls them traitors."

Raisani said the federal government should avoid the mistakes it had committed in the 1950s and 1960s, when the enraged Baloch leaders were persecuted in spite of being promised absolute amnesty if they gave up arms and joined mainstream politics.

For a week, Senator Raisani dominated the Baloch political scene, made front-page headlines and became the subject of editorials of local and national media.

Chief Minister Raisani and some moderate Baloch nationalist parties welcomed these contacts.

Senator Abdul Malik Baloch, who is the president of the middle-class-dominated National Party (NP), said his party "cautiously cheered" Senator Raisani's contacts with armed Baloch groups.

"It would be encouraging if Senator Raisani could serve as a bridge between the government and the Baloch nationalists," said Dr Baloch, a former provincial education minister. "These contacts have to be taken seriously if the government is interested in bringing durable peace in Balochistan."

Dr Baloch, whose NP has come under extraordinary pressure from hardliner Baloch youths to relinquish parliamentary politics and support what they call "Balochistan's freedom struggle", said if another opportunity of negotiating with the Baloch was lost because of lack of commitment, it may do irreversible damage.

The excitement over renewed contacts did not last longer than a week. Raisani did not reveal the name of the nationalist leader who had contacted him, and that led to speculation about the authenticity of his claim.

If the federal government does not support our efforts to reconcile with Baloch leaders to restore peace in the province, then we will also be compelled to take to the hills, said Lashkari Raisani

Political analysts concluded that Raisani was making "unsubstantiated claims" merely to improve the PPP's continuously declining approval ratings in Balochistan where nationalistic and sectarian violence has witnessed an upsurge in the recent weeks.

On their part, the underground Baloch armed groups rejected Senator Raisani's claims.

"If we did not agree to negotiate with the military establishment, why would we talk to Senator Raisani?" said Meerak Baloch, a spokesman for the banned Baloch Liberation Army (BLA). "It is sheer drama," he said. "We know how powerless Mr Raisani is in front of the military establishment."

Likewise, two other armed Baloch outfits, the Baloch Liberation Front (BLF) and the Baloch Republican Army (BRA), also publically ruled out the possibility of compromise or a covert deal with Islamabad on "anything less than independence".

Did Senator Raisani lie to the nation and the media? Nobody knows. There is not an iota of evidence for the people of Balochistan to believe if such contacts actually ever took place. Nonetheless, it is understandable why PPP's efforts to ease tensions in the gas-rich province have fizzled out.

"It is not as if the PPP did not take some bold initiatives in Balochistan given its own limited space in the country's political culture where the military dominates the scene and aggressively monitors every development in the province from the lenses of national security," says one political expert. "What is unfortunate for the PPP is the initiatives it has taken so far seem inadequate and insignificant. It needs to take big steps urgently if it wants to turn the tables."

For instance, the PPP, soon after coming into power, released former Balochistan chief minister Sardar Akhtar Mengal, who had been imprisoned by the Pervez Musharraf government. The party also put together the Aghaz-e-Haqooq-e-Balochistan Package and increased Balochistan's share in the National Finance Commission (NFC) award. These measures did not impress the Balcoh nationalists because of a chronic lack of implementation of most of the proposals and recommendations enshrined in the 2009 Balochistan Package.

What continued to upset the PPP efforts to improve relations with the Baloch was the civilian government's inability to reproduce hundreds of disappeared people and stop their killing in custody. Besides hundreds of Baloch political leaders, activists, students, journalists and lawyers were killed during President Zardari's stint. The civilian government oftentimes blames the 'security establishment' and 'secret services' for these atrocities over which it admits having no control.

"The PPP government did whatever it could to pamper an army of more than 50 ministers in the provincial government to minimise internal rebellion," said a senior newspaper editor in Quetta. "What it failed to do was to grapple with the human rights issues, restrict the extra-constitutional role of the Frontier Crops (FC) and bring all Baloch armed groups to the negotiating table."

President Asif Zardari has not even approached various Baloch political and tribal leaders currently living overseas in self-imposed exile.

Former chief minister Akhtar Mengal, the Khan of Kalt Suleman Dawood, nationalist leaders Hairbayar Marri, Bramdagh Bugti, Senator (r) Sanaullah Baloch and former leader of the opposition in the Balochistan Assembly Kachkol Ali Baloch are all in exile in Europe and the Middle East. Most of these important Baloch leaders have sought asylum overseas because they face persecution at home.

Reconciliation in Balochistan is not possible until key nationalist leaders are assured of complete safety if and when they return home, and offered a proportionate share in the decision-making process over the future of Balochistan.

Malik Siraj Akbar is the editor-in-chief of The Baloch Hal, the first English obline newspaper of Balochistan. He is based in Washington DC as a Hubert Humphrey Fellow at the Center for Public Integrity. Twitter: MalikSirajAkbar
 

maomao

Veteran Hunter of Maleecha
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Nah

[video]http://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?/topic/47686-khalistan-freedom-movement-is-unstoppable/[/video]
LOL fool there are many ex-paki supported terrorists living in the west who ran away when Indian army and other forces swept punjab and gave people of punjab long lasting peace, these dumass Khalistanis can come up with n-muber of sites supported by isi, who cares they cant do shit LOL ahhahahahah...tell me where are these Khalistanis fighting how much land they own, have they created any nation out of India (Btw way we created Bangladesh out of failed state pakistan and Balochistan is next in attaining their independence).....However, BLA kills pakjabis aka punjabis on adaily basis wherein theier are no go zones of pakjabis and more or less the whole of balochistan has been wiped out of punjabis soon Independence will be attained by brave Balochs!

LOL Watch WHAT Baloch do to you pakis on a daily basis:

Videos - Balochvoice
 
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Shaitan

Zandu Balm all day
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[video]http://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?/topic/47686-khalistan-freedom-movement-is-unstoppable/[/video]

Please dude, they have shown their loyalty many times. They are Indian as it gets. They are very much in main stream India, even though they make up like 2% of the whole billion+ population.

Here

Military



Here is the Vice Chief of Army Staff



Here is the former chief of army staff





Arjan Singh the only officer of the Indian Air Force to be promoted to five-star rank.






Sikh and Punjab regiment


Politicans





Sports






 

mayfair

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Do not feed the trolls. Let's stick to talking about Balochistan despite all attempts to derail the thread or divert attention.
 

Shaitan

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Do not feed the trolls. Let's stick to talking about Balochistan despite all attempts to derail the thread or divert attention.

Yes, you're right. It's about Balochistan..
 

SHASH2K2

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Appeal to United nation intervention in Balochistan


ToMr,
Bankimoon Secretary general of United Nation.
I would like to draw your attention pakistan's state terrorism and barbarism on people of Balochistan.Mr,Bankimoon ,Balochistan has been suffering from fifth military operation since the pakistan army has occupied on balochistan forcibly on march 27th in 1948.pakistan has always used its military to suppressed the baloch nation from the independence of their motherland balochistan.so-called islamic country pakistan allied of America and european union on counter terrorism but unfortunately american and european countries ,despite knowing pakistan's cruel on baloch nation has turning their eyes shut .In many occasions baloch leaders and political workers tried to drag the attention of america and european through their press conferences and protest relies on their providing funds to pakistan in the name of terrorism is being used on people of balochistan.But no serious step was taken by any of these countries including united nation.mr,BankimmonThe silent of america and other international world gave courage to facist pakistan to keep continue her barbarism on baloch nation.A serious matter ,the abduction and under custody killing of baloch political workers ,lawyers ,journalists,students including women and children in the hands of pakistan's notorious secret agency ISI.More than three hundred balochs have been killed from the last seven months.The families of baloch missing persons held protest and press conferences for the safe recovery of their loved once all over in pakistan but they got no response from anyone.Amensty international ,human rights watch pakistan ,human rights watch and other organizations asks pakistan to stop abduction and killing of people of Balochistan.despite stoping abduction and killing of baloch missing persons pakistan army and her notoriousagency ISI brought inclemency in their killed and dumped policy in balochistan .now pakistan army has started threatening human rights organization to not go in Balochistan and stop publishing reports against pakistan's barbarism on people of balochistan.Mr,Bankimoonwe (Baloch nation) would appeal to united nation to intervene in balochistan and send their peace army into balochistan to end pakistan's occupation on balochistan, declared balochsitanas a independence state.We are looking forwards your helpthank you.with the best regardsSabreen Baloch a daughter of balochistan.​

 

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