Time for Solidarity with Balochs
By B. Raman
The Killing Fields of Balochistan have
started shocking the conscience of the
international community. Not only
non-governmental human rights organisations,
but even Governmental spokesmen of other
countries---including a spokesperson of the
US State Department in response to Tweets on
the sufferings of the Balochs--- have
started getting over their hesitation in
expressing their concern over the steady
flow of reports from Balochistan about the
atrocities committed by the Pakistani
security forces on the people of
Balochistan.
2. The atrocities have taken many forms.
Brutal killing of the Baloch youth in false
encounters for opposing State repression.
Custodial deaths of Baloch youth rounded up
by the security forces for interrogation on
their suspected association with the
on-going freedom struggle. Hundreds of
missing Balochs, who were rounded up by the
Security Forces for interrogation and who
have since disappeared from public view and
public conscience. Frequent recoveries of
dead bodies of Baloch youth here, there,
everywhere after they were allegedly
tortured to death. Despite all this, the
Baloch freedom struggle continues unabated.
3. Even the conscience of right-thinking
sections of the Pakistani civil society have
been shocked by the atrocities committed on
the Balochs by the Pakistani security forces
which bring to mind the atrocities committed
on the Bengalis of the then East Pakistan
before 1971.
4. Balochistan is the largest State in
Pakistan with the smallest population as
compared to East Pakistan which had more
people than the then West Pakistan. The
atrocities committed by the Pakistani
Security Forces in East Pakistan led to the
exodus into India of millions of Bengalis.
They brought with them dramatic accounts of
what was happening in East Pakistan shocking
our conscience and that of the international
community.
5. There has been no similar exodus of the
Balochs. Balochs fleeing from the crushing
boots of the Pakistani Security Forces have
nowhere to go. They can’t flee into Iran
which has been brutally suppressing a
freedom struggle of its own Balochs. They
can’t flee into Afghanistan which continues
to be in a state of war. They can’t flee to
other parts of Pakistan which will not
accept them.
6. They find themselves bottled up in
Balochistan---- slowly and brutally killed
one after the other without the rest of the
world coming to know about the details. The
Baloch diaspora in the West is very small.
It is unable to play an effective and
articulate role in drawing attention to the
goings-on in Balochistan. It is trying
bravely to do so, but with very limited
success.
7. Even though the Western world has started
showing signs of being disturbed by reports
suggesting a systematic genocide of the
Balochs by the Pakistani Security Forces,
they are unable to go beyond expressing lip
sympathy for the bleeding Balochs.
8. Against this background, the Balochs have
been bewildered by the silence of
Governmental and non-Governmental India. The
Indian Government has been understandably
silent because at a time when it has been
trying to improve its relations with
Pakistan it would find it difficult to come
out openly in moral---if not
material---support of the Balochs.
9. But why is the Indian civil society
silent? Why is non-Governmental India
silent? Why is the world of the Indian media
silent? Why are well-known TV personalities
like Barkha Dutt, Srinivasan Jain, Sonia
Singh, Rajdeep Sardesai, Sagarika Ghose,
Suhasini Haider, Rahul Kanwal, Karan Thapar,
Arnab Goswami silent? Why is the Indian
print media silent? Why are the opposition
political forces observing a silence in the
matter? Why has the Indian strategic
community closed its eyes to Balochistan?
10. We do not have to be defensive just
because some sections of our Jammu & Kashmir
continue to be alienated. But we do not deal
with the alienated sections of J & K the way
the Pakistanis have been dealing with the
Balochs. Despite occasional acts of
violence, we have a thriving democracy in
J&K. The Kashmiris are more prosperous than
the people in many other parts of India. We
have not imposed an Iron Curtain in J&K as
Pakistan has imposed one in Balochistan. We
ought to be proud of the way we have been
dealing with the insurgencies in J & K and
the North-East in a humanitarian manner
despite occasional aberrations.
11. Let us not allow allegations that
emanate from time to time from Pakistan
regarding J&K inhibit us from expressing our
solidarity with the suffering people of
Balochistan. One understands that the
Government cannot be articulate and active
in this matter. But the civil society has to
be articulate and active in giving vent to
its shock and anguish over the reports of
the suppression of the Balochs.
12. The Baloch youth have shown over the
last four or five years that they are
capable of keeping their freedom struggle
sustained on their own without the need for
external support. But they do need the moral
solidarity of the Indian civil society. They
deserve it.
13. The time for expressing our moral
solidarity with them has come.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai, and Associate
of the Chennai Centre For China Studies.
E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com Twitter :
@SORBONNE75)