ANOTHER TERRORIST ATTACK ON CHINESE ENGINEERS IN
PAKISTAN
by B.Raman
The kidnapping of two Chinese engineers working
in an irrigation project in South Waziristan in the
Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan by a group
of pro-Osama bin Laden jihadi terrorists last week and the death
of one of them on October 13,2004, during a rescue operation
mounted by the US-trained Special Services Group, the parent Army
unit of Gen.Pervez Musharraf, draws attention once again to the
growing threat to Chinese lives and interests in Pakistan from
jihadi terrorists belonging to the International Islamic Front (IIF)
of bin Laden. I had highlighted these threats in two of my
previous articles of May and August,2004.
2. In an article (http://www.saag.org/papers10/paper993.html
) written after an explosion in Gwadar in Balochistan on May
3, 2004, which killed three Chinese engineers, I had stated as
follows: " The Chinese suspicion seems to be directed at
anti-Beijing Uighur extremist elements who have taken shelter in
the tribal areas of Pakistan bordering Afghanistan. In view of the
Chinese interest in the Gwadar port as a gateway for the external
trade of the Xinjiang province and as a regional base for the
Chinese Navy, the Uighur extremists, in Beijing's perception,
would have a strong motive to disrupt its construction."
3. In another article (http://www.saag.org/papers11/paper1075.html
)on some explosions in Tashkent in Uzbekistan, I had stated as
follows: " There are no reliable reports of the number of
Uzbeks, Chechens and Uighurs in South Waziristan. Some Pakistani
journalists, who had visited the South Waziristan area in
March-April, had estimated the total number of foreigners, who had
been given shelter there by the local tribals , as about 600,
about 200 of them Uzbeks and the remaining Chechens, Uighurs,
Arabs and others. Other reports place the number of Uighurs as
about 100. The presence of Uzbeks, Chechens and Uighurs in the
Taliban and in Gulbuddin Heckmatyar's Hizbe Islami now operating
in Afghanistan has also been reported. Their number is not known.
The Uighurs trained by the IMU (Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan )
were suspected of involvement in the explosion in Gwadar in
Balochistan earlier this year in which some Chinese engineers were
killed and in the explosions on July 31,2004, at the same town in
which no casualties have been reported. An increase in
attacks on Chinese lives and interests in Pakistan and the
Xinjiang province of China is a possibility."
4.No official figures of the total number of
Chinese engineers and other experts based in Pakistan are
available. However, the "Dawn" of Karachi (October 17,
2004) puts their number at a couple of thousand. In a report on
the terrorist attack on the two Chinese engineers in the South
Waziristan area, it said: "According to one official
estimate, more than a couple of thousand Chinese engineers
and technicians are working on several major projects in
Pakistan. Most of them being in the Frontier and Balochistan
provinces. Saindak, Gwadar and Chashma II are among the major
projects."
5. Reliable and independent sources divide these
engineers and other experts into the following three groups:
- Those assisting Pakistan in the development
of its nuclear and missile capability. They are helping
Pakistan in the already commissioned Chashma I nuclear power
station, in the designing and construction of the second
nuclear power station called Chashma II, and in the running of
the production facilities for the extraction of plutonium from
spent nuclear fuel and for the assembly and fabrication of the
Pakistani versions of the Chinese-designed M-9 and M-11
missiles. Those in this group constitute the largest number.
- Those assisting Pakistan in the construction
of a new port at Gwadar in Balochistan, which is expected to
reduce Pakistan's dependence on Karachi, presently
Pakistan's only major international port and major naval base
and in the exploitation of the rich mineral resources of the
tribal areas bordering Afghanistan, such as the Saindak copper
ore project in Balochistan. They constitute the second largest
number.
- Those assisting Pakistan in the economic
development of the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (FATA)
in which South Waziristan is located and other tribal
areas and of the Northern Areas (Gilgit and Baltistan)
bordering the Xinjiang Province of China. They constitute the
third largest group. While those based in the Northern Areas
mainly help Pakistan in the maintenance and improvement of the
Karakoram Highway, those in the FATA and other tribal areas
assist Pakistan in the exploitation of the mineral resources
and irrigation and power facilities in these areas.
6. In addition to the three groups mentioned above,
small numbers of Chinese experts are also attached to the Pakistan
Railways for improving its performance and to the Pakistan Armed
Forces for assisting in the maintenance of the Chinese
military equipment.
7. The presence of the Chinese engineers and
other experts in the nuclear and missile establishments and in the
armed forces has generally been welcomed by all sections of the
population, including by the Islamic fundamentalist parties and
the Pakistani jihadi organisations, which are members of the bin
Laden-inspired International Islamic Front (IIF), which came into
being in February,1998, and has been in the forefront of the
world-wide jihad in many countries.
8. All of them, including bin Laden's Al Qaeda,
had in the past expressed the gratitude of the Islamic Ummah to
Beijing for its help in the production of Pakistan's atomic bomb,
which is viewed by them as the Ummah's Islamic bomb and hence the
common strategic asset of the Ummah as a whole. There is,
therefore, no controversy about their presence in Pakistani
territory and no jihadi anger against them.
9. There is, however, growing anger against the
Chinese working in Balochistan and in the FATA. The Balochs are
strongly opposed to the Gwadar project, which they view as
essentially meant to serve the economic and military interests of
the Punjabis. Distrusting the Balochs, the regime of President
General Pervez Musharraf has re-settled a large number of
Punjabis, many of them ex-servicemen, in Balochistan, particularly
in the Mekran Coast, for working in the Gwadar project as well as
in another Chinese-aided infrastructure project for the
construction of a coastal road connecting Gwadar and Karachi.
10. The Baloch nationalists have been agitating
against these projects which, they apprehend, would reduce them
to a minority in their homeland. They have also been
critical of the Chinese for assisting the military-dominated
regime in its designs against the Balochs.
11. The anger against the Chinese working in the
FATA, particularly in the South Waziristan area, is due to other
reasons. The terrorist infrastructure of the Chechen, Uzbek and
Uighur organisations, which are associated with bin laden's IIF,
is located in this area. The Chinese have been greatly concerned
over the activities of these elements, which they view as posing a
threat to their security in the Xinjiang province.
12. The foreign-based Uighur organisations
agitating against the Chinese fall into two groups--those
agitating for "azadi" (freedom) for the Uighurs living
in Xinjiang and in the bordering Central Asian Republics (CARs),
who do not have any pan-Islamic objective, and those agitating for
the formation of an Islamic caliphate consisting of Xinjiang and
the CARs.
13. The "azadi" elements largely
operate through propaganda and other means of psychological
warfare (psywar) from safe sanctuaries in the West, including the
USA, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and even some of the CARs. The jihadi
pro-Caliphate elements, which are aligned with bin Laden's IIF,
operate mainly from safe sanctuaries in the FATA and other tribal
areas of Pakistan. They enjoy the support of the tribal elements
and the Pakistani fundamentalist and jihadi organisations.
14.Talking to a group of senior Pakistani
newspaper editors after a visit to China last year, Musharraf was
reported to have stated that he was shocked by the strong language
used by the Chinese leaders while talking of the activities of the
Uighur jihadi terrorists from Pakistani territory.
15. Since then, the Pakistan Army and its
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) have mounted special operations
to smoke out the Chechens, the Uzbeks and the Uighurs operating
from the FATA in co-operation with each other. Apart from killing
or capturing a few Uzbek and Chechen terrorists and killing an
Uighur terrorist, these operations have not produced any
significant results. In the meanwhile, the Hizbut Tehrir, which
has a strong presence in Pakistan and the CARs, has started wooing
the Uighurs in an attempt to set up sleeper cells in Xinjiang.
Amongst the major successes claimed by the Pakistani authorities
since March last are are the killing of Hassan Mahsun of the East
Turkestan Islamic Movement and of Nek Muhammad, a
local Pakistani tribal leader, who was allegedly assisting the Al
Qaeda and the Taliban remnants and causing serious injuries to
Tohir Yuldeshev of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), who,
however, managed to escape.
16. Following the Gwadar explosion of May,
a large number of Chinese intelligence officers from its
Ministries of State (external) and Public (internal) Security have
been deployed in Balochistan and South Waziristan to assist the
Pakistani authorities in their investigation and in their hunt for
the Uighur jihadi terrorists.
17. According to well-informed sources in the
Pakistan Police, next to the US intelligence agencies, the Chinese
agencies have the largest number of their operatives in Pakistani
territory. While the Americans have been helping the Pakistani
military-intelligence establishment in its hunt for the dregs of
the Al Qaeda, the Chinese operatives have been active in the hunt
against the Uighurs.
18. The jihadi organisations suspect that many
of the Chinese operatives inducted into Balochistan and the FATA
after the explosion of May last work under the cover of members of
the staff of Chinese construction companies, which have been
helping Pakistan in its various projects in these areas.
19. It is said that the kidnapping of the two
Chinese engineers was an operation jointly mounted by Pakistani
members of the Jundullah (Army of Allah), a new jihadi
organisation which came to notice for the first time at Karachi on
June 10, 2004, when it unsuccessfully tried to kill the then Corps
Commander of the Pakistan Army at Karachi, the dregs of the
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, and some Chechens and Uighurs
whose organisational affiliation is not clear. The Pakistani
military authorities have projected Abdullah Mahsud, a
former Taliban commander who was released by the US authorities
from detention in their Guantanamo Bay detention camp in March
last, as the mastermind of the kidnap and have admitted that apart
from some local tribal followers of Abdullah Mahsud, three Uzbeks
were also involved. They have claimed that the apparent objective
of the kidnappers was to secure the release of some foreign
terrorists arrested in the area recently. They have played down
the possibility of any specific anti-Chinese motive.
20. On the other hand, Pakistani Police sources
say that the jihadis suspected that the two kidnapped
Chinese were actually intelligence operatives working under the
cover of irrigation engineers belonging to a Chinese company
specialising in the construction of irrigation projects. According
to them, more attacks on Chinese engineers working in Balochistan
and the FATA and a possible terrorist strike against the Chinese
Embassy in Islamabad are likely. There is no indication so far of
the likelihood of any terrorist strike against the Chinese
working in the nuclear and missile establishments and in the Armed
Forces.
(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 Research Foundation (ORF), Chennai Chapter.
E-Mail: corde@vsnl.com )