| The Baluchi Minority's
'Forgotten Conflict'
By Abubakar Siddique from
Radio Free Europe (Radio Liberty) October 25, 2007
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Baluch militants
in Pakistan are waging an insurgency for greater autonomy (AFP)
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The Baluchi minority in southwestern Pakistan and southeastern Iran
is increasingly marginalized, discriminated against by the state, and
suffers from limited access to the benefits of citizenship, according to
political observers and human rights groups.
Although the 6 million-8 million ethnic Baluchis in both countries live in
a strategic location atop untapped hydrocarbon and mineral deposits and
possible trade routes, it looks unlikely that their grim conditions will
improve soon.
A report released on October 22 by the International Crisis Group
argues that only free and fair elections are likely to encourage Baluchi
participation in Pakistani politics. The Brussels-based think tank
predicts that in the absence of political reconciliation, violence will
continue unabated between Pakistan's military and Baluchi nationalist
militants demanding political and economic autonomy.
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"The
Baluch people think their resources are being monopolized by the
government, that their land and their resources are not their own,
and that there is no freedom to express their opinions." -- I.A.
Rehman,
Human
Rights Commission of Pakistan
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Baluchi leaders claim to be fighting for autonomy and control over
their people's abundant natural resources, but Islamabad regards them as
revolutionaries bankrolled by regional archrival India. Years of armed
insurrection have killed hundreds of Baluchi militants, Pakistani troops,
and civilians.
I.A. Rehman, the director of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, an
independent group that monitors human rights abuses, says the fighting has
displaced thousands of Baluchis in the insurgency-plagued districts of
Dera Bugti and Kohlu. Rehman told RFE/RL's Radio Free Afghanistan that the
government's strong-arm tactics to suppress the insurgency have created a
troubling human rights situation.
"There is the question of the suppression of all dissent. The cases of the
disappeared people are only the tip of the problem," Rehman said. "The
real issue in Baluchistan is that the Baluch people think their resources
are being monopolized by the government, that their land and their
resources are not their own, and that there is no freedom to express their
opinions."
Displaced Or Missing
The International Crisis Group calls the Baluchi plight a "forgotten
conflict." It maintains that the fighting has so far displaced 84,000
people, while thousands of Baluchi nationalist activists languish in jails
and hundreds remain missing.
The Pakistani government meanwhile claims to be pouring billions of
dollars into major infrastructure-development projects, including a new
port on the Arabian sea coast at Gwadar, along with the construction of
major roads, rail networks, dams, and new cantonments. Other ambitious
projects are aimed at extracting gold, copper, oil, gas, and minerals in
Baluchistan Province, which accounts for nearly half of Pakistan's
territory and is home to some 8 million people, about half of them ethnic
Pashtuns.
But many Baluchis oppose such projects and regard them as unfair efforts
to exploit their land. Mariana Baabar, an Islamabad-based journalist and
political commentator, says the Baluchis are among the most impoverished
groups in the country, and require assistance to meet basic needs as well
as longer-term development efforts.
"They do not have clean drinking water. They are not being provided with
[basic] health care or education. And they are even regarded as not being
part of Pakistan," Baabar said. The Pakistani government "is trying to
build a port in Gawadar, but, again, non-Baluchis from Punjab and other
regions are being taken there [to settle]. So that is why the people of
Baluchistan are unhappy."
Poverty, Discrimination
Across the border in neighboring Iran, Baluchis are enduring similar woes.
There some 2 million Baluchis concentrated in Iran's southeastern
Sistan-Baluchistan Province, representing about 2 percent of the country's
total population.
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Baluchi insurgents at a camp south of
Quetta, in Pakistan's Baluchistan Province (AFP) |
Drewery Dyke, a Middle East researcher for human rights watchdog
Amnesty International in London, told Radio Free Afghanistan that Iran's
Baluchi population is subject to economic and cultural discrimination.
Sistan-Baluchistan is "certainly one of the poorest and most deprived
provinces in the country. And it has suffered droughts and extreme weather
conditions. And certainly -- with respect to the situation of women and
schooling for girls -- there are shortcomings that the state really needs
to address," Dyke said.
In a September report that Dyke helped research, Amnesty International
documented rights abuses by Iranian authorities and the armed Baluchi and
hard-line Sunni group Jondallah (which has reportedly been renamed the
Iranian Peoples' Resistance Movement). Since 2005, Jondallah appears to
have carried out lethal attacks on Iranian security forces, and taken and
executed hostages. Iranian authorities have blamed Jondollah for other
attacks that resulted in civilian casualties, but the group has denied
responsibility.
Amnesty International has criticized the arrest of suspected Baluchi
militants who might have been subjected to torture to produce forced
confessions. The group has expressed concern over special judicial
procedures put in place by Iranian authorities, and a steep rise in the
number of Baluchis who have been targeted.
Dyke said the Iranian authorities "have established a special
court...almost like a security court to deal with what is obviously a very
severe situation -- in some respects, an insurgency in the country. It
appears to [have led] to a decline, an erosion of the safeguards, [of] the
fair-trial standards and a massive rise in the implementation of the death
penalty against the Baluchis."
The plights of their respective Baluchi minorities are unlikely to improve
in the short term. In the best-case scenario, human rights advocates in
Pakistan maintain that the coming national elections in Pakistan -- if
they are sufficiently transparent -- might boost Baluchi participation in
mainstream politics. That, they say, could provide incentives that help
defuse militancy.
In Iran, Amnesty International warns that heightened global attention to
the Iranian nuclear program might push attention to rights abuses off the
international agenda. 25.10.07 |