THE BALOCH
RESISTANCE MOVEMENT
By. B.Raman
(To be read in
continuation of the earlier articles titled "Unrest in
Balochistan" at
http://www.saag.org/papers9/paper804.html
and "The
Blast in Gwadar" at http://www.saag.org/papers10/paper993.html
)
The law and order
situation in Balochistan continues to deteriorate steadily
despite the use of the Army by the military-dominated regime in
Islamabad to put an end to acts of violence directed at
the members of the Shia community, the Chinese experts deployed
at the Gwadar port project, gas pipelines and other economic
targets, including a local airport, and military personnel.
2. The responsibility
for the restoration of law and order has been informally taken
over by the Army without a formal proclamation and helicopter
gunships, received in the past from the US for use in
counter-terrorism operations directed against the dregs of Al
Qaeda and the Taliban taking shelter in the areas near the
Afghanistan border, are being used against the Balochi
population, which has had nothing to do with either Al Qaeda or
the Taliban, in an attempt to suppress their movement against
the military-dominated regime and what is perceived as its
attempts to reduce the Balochis to a minority in their traditional
homeland.
3. There are various
root causes for the resistance movement being waged by the
Balochis:
- Mounting anger over
the denial of the benefits of the natural gas and other
mineral resources of the province to the Balochis in the
form of increased royalty payments.
- The denial of any
meaningful role to the Balochis in decisions relating to the
construction and administration of the Chinese-aided Gwadar
port project.
- The influx of a
large number of Punjabis and other non-Balochis into the
province to work in the Gwadar project.
- The continuing acts
of discrimination against the Balochis in matters of
recruitment to the Armed Forces and various civilian
departments of the Government.
- The establishment of
more cantonments in the Province to enable the Army better
maintain law and order.
4. The ground situation
has been further complicated by the import of the Shia-Sunni
sectarian divide into the province from Punjab and Karachi and
by the influx of the dregs of Al Qaeda, the Taliban and the
Uighur terrorist elements from the Xinjiang province of China
into the province, where they have been given shelter by the
local fundamentalist organisations with the tacit approval of
the Government.
5. The root causes
mentioned in Para 3 above have given rise to two kinds of
anti-Islamabad and anti-military movements:
- An overt political
movement in the form of protest meetings, demonstrations and
rallies not involving the use of violence. Four
non-religious political parties of Balochistan, who
have formed a united front, continue to play a leading role
in this movement. These are the Jamhoori Watan Party, the
National Party, the Balochistan National Party (Mengal)
and the Baloch Haqtawar.
- A covert freedom
movement involving targeted acts of violence against
economic targets and other infrastructure and military
personnel.
6. The factors mentioned
in Para 4 above have made Quetta, the capital of the province,
the scene of periodic anti-Shia incidents and the bordering
areas of the province safe sanctuaries for Al Qaeda, the
Taliban and the Uighurs for mounting operations against Afghan
and American troops in Afghan territory. The presence of the
Uighurs has added to the security concerns of the Chinese,
necessitating the deployment of a large contingent of the
Pakistan Army, exclusively for the protection of the Chinese
experts working in the Gwadar port and the Saindak copper
extraction projects.
7. The frequent visits
of Chinese security experts to the province and the recent
high-profile joint Sino-Pak counter-terrorism exercise
held in Xinjiang were meant to restore the confidence of the
Chinese experts and to strengthen the co-operation between the
counter-terrorism agencies of the two countries.
8. The reluctance or
inability of the provincial authorities to act effectively
against the dregs of Al Qaeda and the Taliban operating from the
border areas of the province and to put an end to their
terrorist infrastructure directed against the Americans and the
Hamid Karzai Government in Kabul have brought the Pakistan Army
and its Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) under US pressure
to mount operations against these dregs in Balochi territory,
similar to the operations mounted by the Armyt since October
last year against the dregs in the South Waziristan area of the
Federally-Administered Tribal areas (FATA).
9. At a time when its
troops inducted into the South Waziristan area have been
involved in a bleeding guerilla warfare with the tribals and the
Uzbek, Chechen and Uighur dregs in that area resulting in
mounting military casualties, a further alienation of the local
tribals and increasing anti-Musharraf feelings in the Armed
Forces, the Pakistan Army is reluctant to get bogged down in a
similar guerilla warfare against Al Qaeda and the Taliban dregs
in Balochistan, which might further come in the way of its
efforts to quell the Balochi resistance movement.
10. Senior army
officers and the ISI are against getting involved in a two-front
military operation in Balochistan--- one against the Balochi
nationalists, who, in the Army's perception, pose a threat to
Pakistan's unity and economic prosperity and endanger its
relations with China and the other against the dregs of Al Qaeda
and the Taliban, who do not threaten Pakistani lives and
interests. Their first priority is quelling the re-emerging
Balochi independence movement before it assumes alarming
proportions similar to those of the 1970s.
11. Gen.Pervez
Musharraf has been trying to follow a three-pronged policy:
- Keeping the door
open for a political dialogue with the non-religious
political parties, who have confined their activities to an
overt political movement against Islamabad without indulging
in acts of violence.
- A no-holds-barred
military campaign against the Balochi youth who have started
a violent struggle to achieve their objectives. While large
sections of the Balochi population look upon these youth as
freedom-fighters, the military has been projecting them as
terrorists.
- Avoiding getting
bogged down in operations against the dregs of Al Qaeda and
the Taliban in the bordering areas lest it weaken its
operations against the Balochis. The Americans seem to
understand Musharraf's imperative of quelling the re-kindled
Balochi independence movement before acting against the
dregs. The position might change as the US presidential
elections approach, particularly if the reports regarding
the presence of some senior Al Qaeda and Taliban leaders in
the areas near the Iran border are confirmed.
12. The move for a
political dialogue with the provincial political parties has
been a non-starter till now in the absence of any indication of
the military's willingness to consider their demands relating to
the increase in the payment of royalty, suspension of the
construction of the Gwadar project till its implications
for the economic interests of the Balochis are examined, the
stoppage of the influx of the Punjabis and other non-Balochis
into the province and the abandoning of the plans for more
cantonments. They also want the suspension of the military
operations against the Balochi youth.
13.Musharraf has
already made clear his determination to go ahead with the Gwadar
and other Chinese-aided projects in the province and the
projects for new cantonments. His Government continues to deny
any military operations against the Balochi youth. Thus, the
only issues on which his regime may be prepared to
negotiate relate to the demand for more royalty and for more job
opportunities for the Balochis. Even this has not been indicated
openly and specifically.
14.There are two
generations of Balochis now engaged in a simultaneous
confrontation with the Islamabad regime. The first is the older
generation, consisting of the grown-up members of the younger
generation of the 1970s, which had spearheaded the post-1971
freedom struggle, which was brutally crushed by the late
Zulfiquar Ali Bhutto with the help of the Army and the Air
Force. In their midst, one could see recognisable faces like
those of Ataullah Khan Mengal, Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti, Khair Bux
Marri etc and their progenies, who were born in the 1950s and
the 1960s and fought with their elders against the Pakistan Army
before giving up their armed struggle and taking up to politics.
15. The second is the
post-1970 generation of young Balochis. Many of them are from
the same legendary tribes which had waged a freedom struggle in
the 1970s, but had no role to play in it, because they were
still children or not yet born. Many members of this younger
generation went to the Gulf countries in the 1980s and 1990s,
served in the local police and security forces, acquired a
certain expertise in the use of arms and ammunition and
explosives and have since returned to Balochistan. It is these
elements, which constitute the hard-core of the Baloch
Liberation Army (BLA), which has been in the forefront of the
current freedom struggle.
16. The BLA is a very
well-organised and well-motivated cladestine organisation, with
a high degree of invisibility. Very little is known about its
leaders and cadres. One hears of them whenever there is a
spectacular incident such as the eight explosions in Quetta on
Pakistan's Independence Day on August 14, 2004, the ambush of a
group of seven Pakistani army officers going for shopping in the
Khuzdar area on August 1, killing five of them,, the abortive
attempt to kill the Balochistan Chief Minister Jam Yousef in the
same area the next day, the frequent disruptions of gas and oil
supplies to Punjab by blowing up the pipelines, the blowing-up
of the Sui local airport etc, but one rarely sees them.
17. The resistance
fighters of the BLA are as invisible as those of Iraq and have
been operating in a large number of small. autonomous cells,
capable of opportunistic actions without the apparent need for a
central command and control. Like the US Army in Iraq, the
Pakistan Army in Balochistan has been totally foxed by their
activities. It has been groping in the dark, without being able
to identify them and penetrate their set-up.
(The writer is
Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of
India, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies,
Chennai, and Distinguished Fellow and Convenor, Observer
Reserach Foundation (ORF), Chennai Chapter. E-Mail: corde@vsnl.com
)