What's new

What options does the Pakistan Government have to resolve the Balochistan issue?

What options does the Pakistan Government have to resolve the Balochistan issue?

  • Apply force to suppress complaints

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Hope that this problem dies away with time

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Ignore issue as more pressing problems for country

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    4

MenInG

PakPassion Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 2, 2004
Runs
217,993
We had a plane flying overhead during the Afghanistan game with a message for Pakistan - we have now had the BLA banned

Balochistan is in the news and the fact is that there is a problem.

Is their a solution to this issue and can this problem be resolved to the satisfaction of all stakeholders?
 
There's not much they can do besides trying to develop the region. Pakistan and Iran should team up and find a solution to the social and economic problems that both Balochistans face.
 
The plane wasn't flown by Balochis. There are only 2 tribes now out of 50+ that have a problem with the state, so there is no problem to solve. In 10 years this issue won't exist anymore due to development and the fact that other ethnicities will far outnumber locals anyway who's population has been a decline.
 
i suppose the fastest way to pacify balochistan would be to hang musharraf. while he is still alive.
for extra judicial killings that were done during his tenure.
 
The best way to resolve the Balochistan and Pashtun issue is to actually spend money on human development there. More representation in mainstream politics can also help a lot.

Although i’m not a supporter of the PTM or BLA because of their bad intentions, the people of KPK and Balochistan have been neglected and i can understand their anger.
 
The suffering of Baluch people has been ignored for a long time. Give them education, healthcare, jobs and so forth to end the India supported insurgency. The angry Baluch is not pro-India rather rightfully mad at their own country for ignoring their needs. They have always been kept on the margin by Islamabad. Force is only to be used against the terrorists not the common person who wants their rights.
 
There is a long list of things that need to be done. Very first step must be return of missing persons and accountability of armed forces operating in this region.
 
Only way is to improve the economy of the country. When money comes in then nobody will listen to what these organizations have to say.
 
I don't know whats to resolve... there is currently no insurgency in Baluchistan.
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]

I think Pakistan needs to take some bold steps and invest extensively in Balochistan & FATA whereas our existing government has made life hell for current operations and is unfortunately under extreme levels of tunnel vision.

Quetta being provincial Capital of Balochistan is still far behind than many other cities. It is very important to give controlled highway/motorway linkage with such regions otherwise it would only be a loss for Pakistan if these regions are not utilized well enough and hence further agitating the grievances like there were in Bangladesh of today.
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]

I think Pakistan needs to take some bold steps and invest extensively in Balochistan & FATA whereas our existing government has made life hell for current operations and is unfortunately under extreme levels of tunnel vision.

Quetta being provincial Capital of Balochistan is still far behind than many other cities. It is very important to give controlled highway/motorway linkage with such regions otherwise it would only be a loss for Pakistan if these regions are not utilized well enough and hence further agitating the grievances like there were in Bangladesh of today.

That can only happen if the military stops ruling the country, which basically means never.

People say that our state has neglected Balochistan and FATA. That is simply incorrect, because the connotation of their use of “neglect” suggests that these two regions have been neglected due to incompetence.

However, that is not true. The state that Balochistan and the former FATA regions finds themselves in is a result of a carefully designed strategic policy. We have kept both regions poor and uneducated for two different but equally revulsive reasons.

We have kept Balochistan poor and uneducated to suppress the separatist movement. You put money in their pockets and books in their hands and you will find it very hard to keep them under the lid. Unfortunately for the military of Pakistan, this strategy did not work in East Pakistan because of geographic reasons. However, it is working in Balochistan so far and they are getting away with human rights violations.

We have kept the former FATA district poor and uneducated because it is our playground whenever we decide to don our mercenary hat. During the Cold War, We used FATA to train militants that destroyed the social fabric of Afghanistan in exchange for USD.

During the WoT, we allowed the U.S. to conduct drone strikes in exchange for USD. Furthermore, because of the looming threat that India would give us a taste of our medicine via proxy militants, we continue to suppress the public of FATA under the pretext of defending our border. Again, you put money in their pockets and books in their hands, and you can no longer exploit them for your designs.
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]

First thing is, these movements would not have raised up if we treated people of these regions well enough. When you are living in a home, Parent gives one of his child Mercedez whereas Motorbike to the other, Isn't this discrimination?

In my opinion, if these regions are developed on all dimensions, it will be good for the overall progress of the country.

Look at Punjab right now and see how over populated it is specially the Central Punjab. Why do you think there is such disparity? Only because Punjab is the driving hub of Pakistan and faces way too much burden. If initiatives for development were set-up in Balochistan, FATA and even Gilgit Baltistan, It will encourage removal of this disparity and bring contribution to GDP from other parts of the country as well.
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]

First thing is, these movements would not have raised up if we treated people of these regions well enough. When you are living in a home, Parent gives one of his child Mercedez whereas Motorbike to the other, Isn't this discrimination?

In my opinion, if these regions are developed on all dimensions, it will be good for the overall progress of the country.

Look at Punjab right now and see how over populated it is specially the Central Punjab. Why do you think there is such disparity? Only because Punjab is the driving hub of Pakistan and faces way too much burden. If initiatives for development were set-up in Balochistan, FATA and even Gilgit Baltistan, It will encourage removal of this disparity and bring contribution to GDP from other parts of the country as well.

The insurgency in Balochistan is rooted in the independence. Prior to the independence, Balochistan comprised of four princely states: Kalat, Lasbela, Makran and Kharan.

The Khan of Kalat refused to join Pakistan before our army, the guardian angel of Pakistan, captured Kalat forcefully in 1948. This led to the beginning of the insurgency and the separatist movement in Balochistan.
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]

First thing is, these movements would not have raised up if we treated people of these regions well enough. When you are living in a home, Parent gives one of his child Mercedez whereas Motorbike to the other, Isn't this discrimination?

In my opinion, if these regions are developed on all dimensions, it will be good for the overall progress of the country.

Look at Punjab right now and see how over populated it is specially the Central Punjab. Why do you think there is such disparity? Only because Punjab is the driving hub of Pakistan and faces way too much burden. If initiatives for development were set-up in Balochistan, FATA and even Gilgit Baltistan, It will encourage removal of this disparity and bring contribution to GDP from other parts of the country as well.

Yeah that's why Central Punjab lags severely behind in tax collection. Paindus always think they are the center of the world.


One Karachi has more tax collection than all of Punjab.
 
For more than 11 years, relatives of people who disappeared in the murk of a separatist movement in southwestern Pakistan have gathered outside the Press Club of Quetta wanting to know who took their fathers, husbands and sons.

The daily sit-in protest in the provincial capital of Balochistan began on June 28, 2009, after a doctor, Deen Muhammad, was abducted by "unknown men".

Relatives suspect Muhammad, like many other missing ethnic Balochs, was snatched by Pakistani security forces hunting separatists, who for decades have waged a campaign for greater autonomy or independence.

Sometimes less than a dozen join the daily protest, other days many more, but Muhammad's two daughters have been among the regulars since they were eight and 10 years old.

"Our little hands were holding pictures of our father back then; now we have grown up and we still have no clue if he is alive," Sammi Baloch, now 21, told Reuters news agency by telephone from Quetta.

When the weather is too extreme in Quetta to hold protest, a sit-in is observed by Balochs in front of the press club in Karachi, Pakistan's largest city and a melting pot for different ethnic groups.

'Stop disappearing people'

The separatist movement in Balochistan, a sparsely populated, mountainous, desert region bordering Afghanistan and Iran, has both waned and intensified over the years.

Last month, the Balochistan National Party (BNP) quit Prime Minister Imran Khan's parliamentary bloc, frustrated by unfulfilled promises to address Baloch grievances including the festering issue of the disappeared.

When he led the BNP into an alliance with Khan's coalition two years ago, Akhtar Mengal gave the government a list of 5,128 missing people.

Since then, more than 450 of the people on the list have been found or returned to their families, but during the same period, Mengal says another 1,800 were reported to have disappeared.

"If you cannot recover people, at least stop disappearing more people," said Mengal.

Another Baloch party - set up in the months prior to the 2018 elections with backing from the military establishment, according to political analysts - is in a coalition with Prime Minister Khan's party at federal and provincial levels.

Balochistan Awami Party Senator Anwar-ul-Haq Kakar told Reuters the numbers of the missing are "exaggerated".

But Mama Qadeer, who heads a group called Voice for Baloch Missing Persons, keeps his own count.

"In last six months, the number of Baloch missing persons has risen," he told Reuters by telephone. His son disappeared 10 years ago.

In February last year, Qadeer's group handed a list of 500 missing people to provincial officials. Since then, nearly 300 have been returned to their homes but 87 others disappeared in the first half of this year, according to the group.

But for all the durability of the Baloch struggle, the conflict has seldom drawn international attention.

It grabbed headlines however in late June when a group of young Baloch fighters launched an attack on the Pakistan Stock Exchange in Karachi.

Last week, three soldiers were killed and eight wounded in Balochistan's Panjgoor district, an area known for attacks by Baloch rebels.

But beyond giving the grinding casualty toll, the veil of secrecy over the conflict is seldom lifted, and foreign journalists are often discouraged from visiting Balochistan.

Multiple calls, texts and emails to Pakistan's human rights ministry, the military and Balochistan's provincial government, seeking their comments for this story went unanswered.

The military issued a statement last year sympathising with families of missing Balochs, while saying that some may have joined rebel groups and "not every person missing is attributable to the state".

Pakistan has repeatedly blamed India for fanning the rebellion in Balochistan, a charge New Delhi has consistently denied.

A federal commission set up nine years ago listed 6,506 cases of enforced disappearances nationwide by the end of 2019. Most came from the northwestern province of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.

Only 472 were registered from Balochistan. Advocacy groups say Balochistan's number is far higher, pointing to difficulty in having cases accepted by the commission.

"There's hardly a home in Balochistan that hasn't had a relative or loved one picked up," Mohammad Ali Talpur, an aged activist who once fought alongside Baloch rebels in the 1970s, told Reuters.

The conflict has a long, complex history, but since that time, the stakes rose as Balochistan's wealth of copper, gold, gas and coal deposits caught China's eye.

The prospects of Pakistan's most reliable ally pouring in money excited successive governments, while heightening Baloch resentment over how little would come their way.

Separatist fighters have frequently targeted Chinese construction in Gwadar, a port on the Balochistan coast, near the entrance to the strategically-important Gulf of Oman.

In 2018, the Balochistan Liberation Army launched an assault on the Chinese consulate in the southern port city of Karachi, killing four Pakistani police and civilians.

It was the most prominent attack by the group until June 29 this year, when its fighters attacked the stock exchange, again killing four people.

The attack came a day after hundreds of relatives of missing Balochs gathered in Quetta to mark the 4,000th day of their protest since the disappearance of Deen Muhammad.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...istan-disappear-conflict-200720052927939.html
 
QUETTA: The Levies Force registered a case against provincial Minister for Food and Population Welfare Sardar Abdul Rehman Khan Khetiran and his “two guards” on Sunday over the murder of a social media activist, Anwar Jan Khetiran.

The activist was murdered on July 23 by some armed men in Naharkot, in Balochistan’s Barkhan district, when he was on his way home on a motorbike.

Officials of the Levies Force said that Anwar Jan’s brother had nominated Sardar Khetiran and his two guards, Adam Khan and Nadir Khan, in the case. The complaint was filed by Ghulam Sarwar Khetiran, the elder brother of the slain man.

According to the complaint, Anwar had been writing since long on social and other problems of his area and about atrocities and alleged corruption of the minister.

Ghulam Sarwar alleged that about two months ago Sardar Khetiran warned Anwar and asked him to quit the “profession of journalism”.

He claimed that at Sardar Khetiran’s behest his guards killed his brother. He also nominated the minister in his FIR that was registered in the Levies Thana, Naharkot.

When contacted, Sardar Khetiran denied the allegations levelled by the slain activist’s brother. “I have nothing to do with the murder of Anwar Jan,” the minister said, adding that the two other persons nominated in the FIR were not security guards.

“I have no enmity with Anwar Jan Khetiran’s family,” he said.

Anwar’s other brother, Mohammad Akbar Khetiran, said his brother used to write on social media platforms about the problems faced by the people of his area. He said Anwar also used to work for a daily published in Punjab, called Naveed Pakistan.

However, some journalists in Barkhan said Anwar was not a member of the local press club. But he did post comments on social media platforms.

He was affiliated to the National Party.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1571349/balochistan-minister-booked-over-social-media-activists-murder
 
Back
Top