British authorities have been criticised by
the European Parliament as well as human rights activists and
accused of plotting a \'prisoner swap\' with Pakistan after the
mysterious arrest this week of two London-based nationalists
from the oil-rich province of Balochistan.
The two men, Faiz Mohammed Baluch and Nawabzada Hyrbiyar Marri,
were held under the Terrorism Act following raids in London
Tuesday morning, sparking condemnations by the high-profile
British rights activist Peter Tatchell and the Strasbourg- and
Brussels-based European Parliament.
And, according to Lakhumal Luhana, a Baloch human rights
campaigner in London, the arrests were part of a plan to
exchange the two men for Rashid Rauf, a suspected Islamic
terrorist who is being held in Pakistan and is wanted by
Britain.
Britain and Pakistan are claimed to be in secret talks for the
extradition of 26-year-old Rauf, a suspect in an alleged plot to
blow up US-bound passenger planes with liquid explosives in
August last year.
Rauf, who is from the city of Birmingham and is a dual citizen
of Britain and Pakistan, was arrested in Bahawalpur, Pakistan,
in August 2006 - a month after Britain put an organisation known
as the Baluchistan Liberation Army in its list of banned
terrorist groups.
Although charges against him in Pakistan were dropped in
December 2006, British newspapers reported in April this year
that Pakistan was prepared to extradite Rauf in exchange for
eight suspected members of the Baluchistan Liberation Army.
Islamabad says the eight men are involved in low-intensity
insurgency in Balochistan, a remote and insurgency-prone
Pakistani province that is said to be rich in oil and natural
gas deposits.
The Daily Telegraph newspaper said Rauf is expected to be
extradited in the next few weeks but that Britain has become
increasingly frustrated by Pakistan\'s insistence on arresting
Baloch nationalists.
It said Pakistan has held back intelligence vital to Britain\'s
counter-terrorism effort and co-operation with the campaign in
neighbouring Afghanistan on the grounds that Britain must first
arrest Baloch activists suspected of being involved in
insurgency.
The two men arrested in London are being detained on suspicion
of the \'commission, preparation or instigation of acts of
terrorism,\' according to the police.
But Luhana said: \'This is a prisoner swap. We have asked the
British not to succumb to pressure and to support the Baloch, a
secular force in Pakistan.\'
Meanwhile, members of the European Parliament, an elected body
that meets in Strasbourg and Brussels, criticised Pakistan at an
urgent meeting held Wednesday for what they described as
Islamabad\'s \'illegal and indirect ways to pressurise and curb
Baloch human rights workers living outside Pakistan.\'
MEPs claimed Pakistan was \'making forged police cases against
Balochis living abroad\', and urged British authorities not to
hand over the two arrested men to the Pakistani Army.
British human rights activist Peter Tatchell said the pair was
lawful campaigners for Baloch independence, and feared the two
men could be sentenced to death if extradited to Pakistan.
\'I urge the British government to not give in to pressure from
the Pakistani dictator, President (Pervez) Musharraf,\' he said.
\'The extradition of these men would result in their arrest,
torture, imprisonment and possible execution.
\'The Pakistani authorities have repeatedly sought to frame
peaceful nationalists and human rights campaigners, both inside
Baluchistan and abroad. These arrests are likely to have been at
the request of the Pakistan government, which has long been
seeking the extradition of Baluch nationalists exiled in
London,\' Tatchell added.
The British High Commission in Islamabad has denied reports of a
prisoner-swap. Reports said Britain will find it difficult to
extradite Baloch nationalists as Pakistan regularly imposes the
death penalty.
Source: http://story.malaysiasun.com/index.php/ct/9/cid/b8de8e630faf3631/id/307495/cs/1/