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Pakistan's Other War
Islamabad is already battling al-Qaeda. Now it's facing an insurgency in
Baluchistan
Time
Magazine Monday, June 19, 2006
BY TIM MCGIRK | ISLAMABAD
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JOHN MOORE / GETTY IMAGES
DESERT FOXES: A Baluch guerrilla fires a rocket at a
Pakistani army position |
He's 80 years old, but Nawab
Akbar Khan Bugti, a feudal lord in Pakistan's rugged Baluchistan province,
wants to fight to the death. A Kalashnikov rifle strapped to his back,
Bugti travels by camel through desert ravines and hobbles up cliffs to
hidden caves where he plots ways for his Baluch tribesmen to ambush the
Pakistani army. "It's better to die? as the Americans say? with your spurs
on," says Bugti. "Instead of a slow death in bed, I'd rather death come to
me while I'm fighting for a purpose." That purpose is to make life as
difficult as possible for Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf. Bugti is
one of three Baluch tribal chiefs leading an armed uprising against
Islamabad. In recent months the fighting has picked up. Hundreds of
civilians have died, as well as nearly 400 government soldiers, and
thousands of Baluch have been displaced. The conflict has diverted
Musharraf's overstretched troops and U.S.-supplied weaponry away from the
fight against al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Moreover, the President's aides
say that he is convinced Bugti and fellow tribal leaders Balach Marri and
Ataullah Mengal, whom he labels "miscreants and outlaws," want to kill
him? a rocket attack on Dec. 14 in Baluchistan narrowly missed a public
address he was making. The fighting flared immediately after. Musharraf,
says an aide, has vowed he will "sort them out."
That's not going to be easy. The Baluch, a distinct ethnic group spread
over Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan, are fiercely independent and have
been a thorn in Islamabad's side for decades regardless of who is in
power. Baluchistan is rich in gas and minerals, yet it is Pakistan's
poorest province. The government says it wants to develop the territory to
improve the lives of the Baluch and to secure the country's energy needs.
But the Baluch say they have been marginalized and do not receive adequate
royalties from the central authorities for the extraction of the
province's natural resources. Islamabad says the feudal chiefs are
pocketing the royalties for themselves.
Bugti's clan, numbering about 300,000, was granted access to piped gas
from the Sui fields on their land only a few years ago even though the gas
had been pumping for decades and had already been flowing to major cities
and towns. The government is also building a multimillion-dollar port,
Gwadar, off Baluchistan's southern coast, which Musharraf hopes will one
day rival Dubai in the nearby Gulf. The Baluch fear, however, that Gwadar
will draw so many settlers from Pakistan's other provinces that they will
become an underclass minority in their own land.
So the Baluch clans have gone on the offensive. They are sabotaging
railways, blowing up gas pipelines and electricity cables, and attacking
soldiers both in their garrisons and while they are on patrol on
Baluchistan's desert roads. A mysterious group calling itself the
Baluchistan Liberation Army has also sprung up. Bugti and the other tribal
leaders say they have no link to the B.L.A., but Islamabad says the group
is a creation of the feudal chieftains and that the insurgency is backed
by India?an allegation New Delhi denies. B.L.A. snipers use World War
II-vintage Lee-Enfield rifles to pick off soldiers whenever the Pakistanis
leave their camps. On May 11 five bombs exploded in a police training camp
outside Baluchistan's provincial capital Quetta, killing six policemen and
injuring 13. No one claimed responsibility, but officials blamed the
B.L.A. for the attacks. The fighting often stops the flow of gas to
Pakistani cities and towns, and it has halted exploration for minerals. If
the conflict persists, it could jeopardize Gwadar's future as well as a
proposed oil pipeline from Iran to Pakistan, which would pass through
Baluchistan. "Right now it's a low-intensity insurgency," says a Western
diplomat, "but it could get very nasty."
Bugti symbolizes Baluchistan's character. He says he killed his first man
when he was just 12, and his life ever since has been a series of unending
blood feuds with other clans and with the Pakistani military. Bugti sees
himself as a warrior fighting a noble cause. He is self-taught and an avid
reader? until March, the library in his rambling, earthen castle was lined
with hundreds of books on philosophy, Western and oriental religions and
the European classics. Then the castle, and the library with it, were
destroyed by army cannon fire. Bugti is a vegetarian, a rarity among the
meat-chomping Baluch, and sups every night on a bowl of green chili
peppers, according to a frequent guest. He once served as a federal
cabinet minister? and later spent years in jail for insurrection. His band
of men move between mountain hideouts, sleeping in caves. Bugti says he
uses "a rock for my pillow." Reached through a satellite phone by Time in
his mountain lair, Bugti spoke of how he deals with pain (he is partially
paralyzed in one leg), temperatures of 45°C, and the perils of waging a
guerrilla war against 26,000 Pakistani soldiers in Baluchistan: "Physical
hardship? pain, the extreme heat? this is all a state of mind. You either
give into it or not. And I choose not to."
The conflict in Baluchistan has consequences beyond its desert wastes.
Pakistan is one of Washington's bulwarks in the war on terror, and
receives around $600 million a year in U.S. military aid. According to
Baluch rebel sources in Quetta and military sources in Islamabad, U.S.
helicopters supplied to Pakistan for hunting members of al-Qaeda have been
redirected to Baluchistan's deserts to fight Bugti and his two
comrades-in-arms. Three Cessna aircraft, outfitted with sophisticated
surveillance equipment and given to Pakistan last year by the U.S. to help
catch heroin smugglers, have also been drafted into service against the
Baluch rebels. Quetta military base sources say that when U.S.
antinarcotics agents examined the Cessnas' flight records last month, they
found that only seven hours were spent chasing drug runners, while most of
the flying time was logged over Bugti's craggy domain scanning for rebel
camps.
The U.S. military partnership with Pakistan was designed principally to
take the fight to al-Qaeda and those members of the Taliban who have fled
across the Afghan border. But a Pakistani military official in Islamabad
says the Bush Administration is "fully in the know" that U.S. weaponry is
also being used against the Baluch insurgency. "This is all part of a
bigger battle against troublemakers challenging the state," says the
official. A U.S. State Department official told Time that there's nothing
in the agreement with Pakistan to prevent Musharraf using U.S. military
aid against Baluch insurgents. "When we transfer the equipment for them,
it's for internal security and self-defense," the official says. "There's
no 'for al-Qaeda use only' tag on it." Unlike the Taliban and al-Qaeda
operating further north along the mountainous Afghan border region,
however, the Baluch are not Islamist militants. "They are secular and
anti-Taliban," says Samina Ahmed of the International Crisis Group, "yet
American guns are being used against them." (Bugti says he's an agnostic,
and some clan leaders espouse socialist values and enjoy whisky.) Baluch
sources say that U.S. surveillance aircraft and Cobra gunships have
targeted tribesmen. The State Department official says, "We've seen no
evidence that our equipment has been used to violate human rights."
The fighting is taking an increasing toll on civilians, say Baluch sources
and independent observers. Ali Dayan Hasan, South Asia researcher for the
New York City-based Human Rights Watch, says that "scores of people have
disappeared." Musharraf's forces, he says, are carrying out "a policy of
abduction, illegal confinement and torture." The Human Rights Commission
of Pakistan has documented claims that after a truck hit a land mine on
Jan. 11, killing three Frontier Constabulary guards, government security
forces went on a rampage executing 12 civilians. Two tribal elders sent to
recover the bodies were also shot, says the Human Rights Commission.
Pakistani army officials deny that soldiers have engaged in abuse or
indiscriminate killing. A Pakistani military commander in Baluchistan told
Time that "the reason we are not going for a massive, one-to-end-it-all
strike is the fear of collateral damage."
Pakistani officials say that Bugti and the others are desert relics,
feudal lords willing to sacrifice their men in battle and delay progress,
just to retain their power. Bugti says that a deeper issue of autonomy as
at issue. "We Baluch believe that the best way to die is to die fighting,"
says Bugti. "Are we Baluch the masters of our own destiny? Because if
that's taken away from us, then life doesn't really matter."
Monday, Jun. 19, 2006
With reporting by Ghulam
Hasnain/Dera Murad Jamali, Syed Talat Hussain/Islamabad and Elaine
Shannon/Washington
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