BALOCHISTAN: THE HOUR OF RECKONING
by B.Raman
(To be read in continuation of my earlier article of December
29, 2004, titled "Balochistan Continues To Haunt Musharraf” at
http://www.saag.org/papers13/paper1205.html)
"Don't push us ... it is not the 1970s, and this
time you won't even know what has hit you," President Pervez
Musharraf is reported to have warned Baloch nationalist elements during
an interview to the Geo television, Pakistan’s private TV
channel, on January 10,2005.
2. He issued this warning while replying to a question on the
deteriorating law and order situation in Balochistan due to the
protest movement launched by Baloch nationalist elements,
spearheaded by an organisation, which calls itself the
Baloch Liberation Army (BLA). Not much is known about this
organisation. It is possibly an off-shoot of the Baloch People's
Liberation Organisation (BPLO), patterned after the Palestine
Liberation Organisation (PLO), which was active in the 1970s in
the wake of the birth of Bangladesh. It tried to emulate the
Bangladesh freedom struggle, but the Government of
Zulfiquar Ali Bhutto, then in power, managed to crush it with the
help of the Army and the Air Force, forcing its leaders and
remnants to take shelter in Afghanistan, the UK, France and the
then USSR.
3. Musharraf is not wrong when he warns the Baloch
nationalists" it is not the 1970s." In the 1970s, the
Pakistani political leadership as well as the military were yet to
recover from the traumatic loss of East Pakistan, as Bangladesh
was known before 1971. The Army was still in a state of
demoralisation with senior officers blaming each other for the
humiliating debacle in East Pakistan. The US was yet to replenish
all the equipment lost by the Pakistani Armed Forces in East
Pakistan. Pakistan was not a military nuclear power. There
was no terrorist or insurgent movement in Indian Punjab and Jammu
& Kashmir (J&K) to keep the Indian security forces
preoccupied. Indira Gandhi, whom the Pakistani
military-intelligence establishment respected, feared and hated,
was still at the height of her power in India. The then Afghan
Government in Kabul was a close ally of India. Consequently,
worries over the possibility of the Indian and Afghan
Armies helping the Baloch nationalists, either overtly
or covertly, was a factor influencing Pakistan's
policy.
4. Despite all these inhibiting factors, the Pakistani Army and
Air Force, on the orders of Z.A . Bhutto, intervened
and ruthlessly put down the nationalist movement though they took
many months before they could root it out. The Shah of Iran was at
the height of his power and influence in Teheran and he was
determined to see that the BPLO did not succeed lest it had an
adverse impact on Iran's control over its Balochs. He had
reportedly assured Bhutto that if India intervened to help
the Balochs, his Army would enter Balochistan to help the Pakistan
Army crush the Balochs. This imparted some confidence to the
Pakistani leadership.
5. Today, Pakistan is a nuclear power. Jihadi terrorist
organisations from Pakistan continue to keep the Indian security
forces bleeding in J&K. India has had a succession of Prime
Ministers who have no stomach for using the stick against
Pakistan. Afghanistan is ruled by a Government, which is strongly
under the control of the USA and hence unlikely to meddle in
Pakistan's internal affairs. Pakistan's economy is improving
steadily. Musharraf is the blue-eyed boy of the USA and other
Western Governments. US economic and military assistance has been
resumed to Pakistan on a generous scale.
6. The Army has been in receipt of considerable US military
supplies such as helicopter gunships, surveillance
equipment, arms and ammunition etc meant for use against the
remnants of Al Qaeda and the International Islamic Front (IIF) of
Osama bin Laden in Pakistan's border areas. Musharraf could easily
divert them for use against the Baloch nationalists and the US is
unlikely to raise any objection.
7. Despite all this, there are many negative factors too, which
should be a cause for concern for Pakistan. Firstly, when he put
the Baloch revolt down, Z.A.Bhutto was still the popular leader of
Pakistan with considerable public support particularly in Punjab
and Sindh. Musharraf enjoyed such popularity for a few months
after he seized power in October,1999, but his popularity has
declined today because of his supporting the USA in its
operations against the Taliban and Al Qaeda and his refusal to lay
down office as the Chief of the Army Staff (COAS) in violation of
the solemn promise made by him in the beginning of last year.
8. Z.A.Bhutto did not have to contend with strong Islamic
fundamentalist and jihadi terrorist elements. Due to the policies
followed by Zia ul-Haq and his successors as the Army chief,
including Musharraf himself, the jihadi terrorist elements have
become a Frankenstein's monster. There was no large-scale Shia-Sunni
tension in the 1970s. The frequent Shia-Sunni violence was a
product of Zia's encouragement of sectarian forces and
this has become worse since Musharraf took over in 1999, spreading
from Punjab to Sindh, then to Balochistan and now to the Northern
Areas.
9. Musharraf has had till now the unquestioned support of
all the officers of the rank of Major-General and above, but at
lower levels there is hostility to him---in the Army and the Air
Force. This was evident from the involvement of some junior
officers of the Army and the Air Force in the two unsuccessful
attempts to kill him in December,2003, and the recent escape of
one of them, who had been sentenced to death in November,2004,
from Air Force custody. Even earlier, it was known that the
Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI) has penetrated the Army. In
September,1995, Gen.Abdul Waheed Kakar, the then COAS, discovered
a plot by a group of Army officers headed by
Maj.Gen.Zaheer-ul-Islam Abbasi, acting in complicity with the HUJI,
to assassinate him and Mrs.Benazir Bhutto, the then Prime
Minister, and capture power.
10. Recent Pakistani media reports have indicated that some of the
Army and Air Force officers, who were involved in the
December,2003, plots to kill Musharraf, were members of the Jaish-e-Mohammad
(JEM), thereby indicating penetration of the military by it too.
In addition, it is believed that there has been penetration of the
Army by the Hizbut Tehrir too. An Army infiltrated by anti-US
and anti-Musharraf jihadi terrorist elements could not be a
fit instrument for counter-insurgency duties in Balochistan.
11. The military campaign against the Uighur, Uzbek, Chechen,
Kazhak and Arab survivors of the IIF, who are operating from South
Waziristan, has not been successful, despite claims to the
contrary made by Army spokesmen. Violent attacks on the Army
continue to be reported. Already about 210 military and para-military
officers are reported to have lost their lives there and South
Waziristan is threatening to become a mini-Iraq. At a time when
victory against the terrorist remnants is not yet in sight in
South Waziristan, it would be unwise for Musharraf to open up
another front in Balochistan.
12. The continuing prosperity of the Pakistani economy depends on
stability in Balochistan. Industries and power stations in the
rest of Pakistan have already been affected by the frequent
disruptions of gas supply from Sui in Balochistan by the BLA.A
prolonged military conflict between the military and the Baloch
nationalists would cause a set-back to the economy. Moreover,
there is large involvement of Chinese personnel in the Gwadar port
construction and other projects in Balochistan. There is already
considerable tension amongst the Chinese residents following the
killing of two of their colleagues by improvised explosive devices
in May last year by as yet unidentified elements.A
military conflict and the resulting instability would add to this
nervousness and could come in the way of further Chinese
involvement in projects in Balochistan.
13. Finally, there has been a deterioration in the law and order
situation in other parts of Pakistan since Musharraf joined hands
with the USA in October,2001, against Al Qaeda and the Taliban.
The sectarian clashes have spread to Gilgit and Baltistan in the
Northern Areas of Jammu & Kashmir, which are directly
administered by Islamabad. Since the middle of last year, normal
life has been frequently disrupted due to the exacerbation of the
anti-Shia violence and the sprouting of anti-Ismaili
violence in these areas. Musharraf has been watching helplessly
without being able to stop this violence.
14. Any military operation in Balochistan against the nationalist
elements has to be fast and surgical, if it has to be effective.
Otherwise, a prolonged conflict would make the situation
intractable. In 1971, Gen.Yahya Khan and his senior Generals
convinced themselves, just as Musharraf seems to have convinced
himself now, that the Army will have a walk-over in the then East
Pakistan. The result: An independent Bangladesh.
15. Any hasty and over-confident action by Musharraf could create
a similar situation in Balochistan. Musharraf may end up by
being another Gen.Yahya Khan, the COAS in 1971, or another
Lt.Gen.Tikka Khan, who came to be abused as the butcher of the
Bangladeshis.
16. The Annexed report from the "News" (January
13,2005), the prestigious Pakistani daily, gives some idea of the
ground situation in Balochistan, which provoked Musharraf to issue
the warning. (13-1-05)
(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
)
ANNEXURE
Centre to act if asked by Balochistan govt
Sherpao says writ of the govt will be established;
Sui tense; troops, helicopter gunships deployed
By our correspondent
ISLAMABAD: No military action would be taken in Sui without
permission of the provincial government, declared Interior
Minister Aftab Ahmad Khan Sherpao here Wednesday.
"We will extend our support in shape of military operation if
the provincial government asks for such extreme action," he
said, while addressing a press conference at National Crisis
Management Cell (NCMS). Director-General NCMC Brig Javed Iqbal
Cheema was also present on the occasion.
Sherpao said the provincial government was responsible for law and
order situation. The federal government would assist the
Balochistan government if the latter requests for it. "The
writ of the government will be established in Balochistan,"
he said.
He said the authorities had to close down the main Sui gas plant
as a rocket fired by miscreants hit the pipeline of purification
plant and a poisonous gas started leaking. There was a danger to
health of the people living in the surrounding areas, Sherpao
explained.
He said as a result of closure of the plant, gas supply to 22 per
cent of total consumers in the country has been stopped. The
domestic consumers would also suffer from the situation, he said.
He said the Frontier Constabulary (FC) and Defence Services Guards
(DSG) have to show restraint as the miscreants used the civilian
population as cover in Mohammadi Colony, Bugti Colony and other
localities. He said, "Four personnel, including one from FC
and three from DSG, were martyred, while seven others injured in
firing of miscreants, who also used heavy weapons, since January
7."
The minister said 70 to 80 per cent of the population has migrated
from the area. He pointed out that the miscreants have also
received reinforcement of 300 armed persons from Dera Bugti on
Tuesday.
However, he said, the incident has nothing to do with demands of
Nawab Akbar Bugti as a ministerial committee formed by the federal
government was already working on these demands.
The minister said 14,000 rounds of small arms, 435 rounds of
rockets and mortars, and 50 to 60 rounds of multi-barrel rocket
launchers have been fired by the miscreants since January 7.
Responding to a question, Sherpao said the action would be taken
against persons involved in rape of a lady doctor. He said a
judicial inquiry and an inquiry by military authorities are in
progress. "Any action will be taken in the light of these
inquiries," he said.
He said the process of development in Balochistan would not be
affected by such incidents, adding the government had earmarked Rs
20 billion for the province under the Public Sector Development
Programme for the ongoing financial year.
Our Quetta correspondent reports: The law and order situation
remained under control in Sui Tehsil on Wednesday and electricity
has been restored to most part of the area, said a Sui
administration official.
Nearly all business centres and bazaars resumed their businesses
after five days and the people were seen in purchasing daily
commodities. So far, eight people have died and 33 others wounded
in the rocket attacks and firing incidents in Sui Tehsil, said the
official.
Reports said the paramilitary troops and other law-enforcement
agency personnel patrolled the Sui Tehsil, while paramilitary’s
helicopters hovered on the sky all the day. Though, no firing
incident was reported from any part of Sui on Wednesday, the
officials described the overall situation there as very tense.
Agencies add: Army spokesman Maj-Gen Shaukat Sultan told The
Associated Press that troops were also being deployed in Sui.
"Our gas installations have national importance, and we are
deploying troops in Sui to protect our facilities and the staff
working there," he said. However, he refused to elaborate on
how many troops had been sent there, although another official
said about 500 soldiers and "some helicopter gunships"
had reached Sui, and more were on their way to the area.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, would not say
whether any Army operation was being considered against the
attackers. "Such details cannot be shared with the media, but
the troops are going to Sui to restore writ of the
government," he said.
(The
writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt.
of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute for
Topical Studies, Chennai, and Distinguished Fellow and Convenor,
Observer Research Foundation (ORF), Chennai Chapter. E-mail: corde@vsnl.com
)