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Pakistan Fights Another
War in Remote Province
Report By Gary Thomas Voice of America Washington
Part of the reason for President Bush's trip to Pakistan is to bolster
support for anti-terrorist efforts against remnants of the Taleban and
al-Qaida. But as VOA correspondent Gary Thomas reports from Washington,
Pakistan's other war as it has been called may affect some
counterterrorism operations. As if cross-border terrorism
and radical Islamists were not trouble enough, Pakistani President
Pervez Musharraf is also confronting resurgent nationalism and
insurgency in the remote southwestern province of Balochistan.
Attacks by armed insurgents on gas pipelines began in 2004 and continued
to rise in 2005. Paramilitary forces of the Frontier Corps are locked in
battle with insurgents of the shadowy Baloch Liberation Army. Human
rights groups charge the government with human rights abuses in the
province. And some analysts believe that al-Qaida and Taleban remnants
along Afghanistan's southern border are exploiting the unrest to their
advantage. In a telephone interview Agha Shahid Bugti,
general-secretary of the nationalist Jamhoori Watan Party and spokesman
for the large and powerful Bugti clan, says the Baloch grievances are
simple.
"Gas has been taken away and Balochistan province gets
nothing out of it," he says. "And other minerals, everything has been
taken away and, again, they get nothing. And particularly in form of
royalties they get very meager amount, the provincial government gets a
very meager amount. So this has been developing and developing. And
today the situation has become worse and worse."
Balochistan is vast and sparsely populated, making up 43 percent of
Pakistan's land mass but holding only about five percent of the
country's population. Bordering both Afghanistan and Iran, it is not
only rich in resources like gas, but has strategic military and economic
significance for Pakistan. With Chinese help, the federal government is
building a new deep water port at Gwadar along the Balochistan coast.
Located close to the Strait of Hormuz, it will benefit neighboring Iran,
Afghanistan, and China, as well as the countries of Central Asia as an
outlet to the sea. The Baloch, who were forcibly
incorporated into Pakistan at independence in 1947, feel they have not
benefited from their province's wealth and have been exploited by
Punjabis in the capital of Islamabad. From 1973 to 1977, the government
ruthlessly suppressed a rebellion by tribal Baloch separatists that left
five thousand Baloch fighters and three thousand Pakistani troops dead.
The government says Baloch nationalism is simply being exploited by
corrupt tribal rulers, known as sardars, that have held power for years
in a feudal system.
The sardars are extortionists who are controlling people
with their own private militias, charges President Musharraf, who has
vowed to crush any Baloch rebellion. The government also
denies that the regular army is involved in operations in Balochistan.
Neither side's claim can be independently verified as the government has
barred journalists and diplomats from the province.
Although public attention to anti-terrorist efforts has
generally focused on Pakistan's eastern frontier, Taleban and al-Qaida
remnants have also been using the vast territory of Balochistan to move
back and forth between Pakistan and southern Afghanistan.
Selig Harrison, of the Center for International Policy
and author of a book on Baloch nationalism, says the Baloch insurgency
is one reason why Pakistani counterterrorism efforts have not been as
energetic as the United States would like. "Usually the
explanation is that the terrain is very difficult, or the Pakistani
intelligence services and armed forces have a number of sympathizers of
the al-Qaida and Taleban in them and that they're deliberately pulling
their punches. But I think really an equally important reason for the
failure of Pakistan to go all-out in those border areas along the Afghan
border is the fact that Musharraf has had to divert significant military
resources to Balochistan to try to deal with this continuing insurgency
there," Harrison says. In a recent report, the
independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan describes Balochistan as
being in what it terms a war-like situation and accuses security forces
of gross human rights violations. Shahid Bugti says
President Bush should raise the issue of Balochistan with President
Musharraf. "When President Bush claims that he's for
democracy, he tells other countries, particularly the Middle East, they
should move toward democracy," he says. "I don't know why doesn't he
apply the same rule or the same principle in this country. He should."
U.S. officials say that is not likely. One official, who asked not to be
named, says U.S. attention has focused on counterterrorism efforts in
the North West Frontier Province and confesses there is little official
knowledge or interest in Balochistan. But, he adds, there may be a more
determined effort by U.S. officials to find out what is going on in
Balochistan after President Bush's Pakistan visit. 2.3.06 |