Turbat massacre: Amidst swoop on traffickers, top official suspended
Rehman Malik sets three-day deadline for FIA to apprehend all human smugglers.
QUETTA:
Authorities in Balochistan have suspended the top administrator a day after the grisly murder of 18 would-be migrants by gunmen in Turbat district by gunmen from a little-known Baloch insurgent group.
The deputy commissioner of Kech district, Aslam Tareen, has been suspended and replaced with Fateh Mohammad Bangar, the additional commissioner of Naseerabad district, according to an official announcement made in Quetta on Saturday.
Tareen was punished for his failure to check illegal human trafficking at the Pakistan-Iran border, it added.
The victims of Friday’s gut-wrenching massacre were trying to travel to Europe via Iran with the help of local smugglers in the hope of finding better jobs there.
Police, meanwhile, swooped on suspected hideouts of human smugglers in Gwadar district. Eight alleged human traffickers were detained – at least one of them is said to have lured the Friday attack victims.
“Police are interrogating the detained men for their involvement in smuggling economic migrants to Europe via Iran,” Sohail Baloch, the deputy commissioner of Gwadar, told The Express Tribune.
Baloch faulted local ‘agents’ for the illegal business and said that without their help, human smugglers from Punjab and other parts of the country could not help their clients traverse the difficult desert route of Dasht.
The detained human smugglers mostly belong to the Dasht plain, a source told The Express Tribune.
The arrests were made shortly after Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani ordered a crackdown on human trafficking rings and their local agents in different areas of Balochistan.
Friday’s sordid killings were ethnically-motivated. A group, identifying itself as Baloch Liberation Tigers (BLT), claimed responsibility and threatened more such attacks on people belonging to Punjab.
Tribal militants have been fighting a low-profile insurgency in the province since long. However, the insurgency became widespread and deadly after the 2006 killing of Baloch chieftain Nawab Akbar Bugti in a military operation.
The Baloch insurgents have been demanding more autonomy and control over natural resources of their province.
Prime Minister’s Adviser on Interior Affairs Rehman Malik, has meanwhile, set a three-day deadline for the Federal Investigation Agency to apprehend all human traffickers. He directed the agency’s chief to submit details of the horrific incident by today (Sunday).
In Quetta, Provincial Home Secretary Naseebullah Bazai said bodies of those killed in Friday’s attack were sent to Karachi, where three of them were identified: two belonged to Gujranwala and the third to Sialkot.
The remaining 15 victims could not be identified. Families have been advised to contact the Edhi Centre in Karachi to identify bodies of their loved ones.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 8th, 2012.
Authorities in Balochistan have suspended the top administrator a day after the grisly murder of 18 would-be migrants by gunmen in Turbat district by gunmen from a little-known Baloch insurgent group.
The deputy commissioner of Kech district, Aslam Tareen, has been suspended and replaced with Fateh Mohammad Bangar, the additional commissioner of Naseerabad district, according to an official announcement made in Quetta on Saturday.
Tareen was punished for his failure to check illegal human trafficking at the Pakistan-Iran border, it added.
The victims of Friday’s gut-wrenching massacre were trying to travel to Europe via Iran with the help of local smugglers in the hope of finding better jobs there.
Police, meanwhile, swooped on suspected hideouts of human smugglers in Gwadar district. Eight alleged human traffickers were detained – at least one of them is said to have lured the Friday attack victims.
“Police are interrogating the detained men for their involvement in smuggling economic migrants to Europe via Iran,” Sohail Baloch, the deputy commissioner of Gwadar, told The Express Tribune.
Baloch faulted local ‘agents’ for the illegal business and said that without their help, human smugglers from Punjab and other parts of the country could not help their clients traverse the difficult desert route of Dasht.
The detained human smugglers mostly belong to the Dasht plain, a source told The Express Tribune.
The arrests were made shortly after Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani ordered a crackdown on human trafficking rings and their local agents in different areas of Balochistan.
Friday’s sordid killings were ethnically-motivated. A group, identifying itself as Baloch Liberation Tigers (BLT), claimed responsibility and threatened more such attacks on people belonging to Punjab.
Tribal militants have been fighting a low-profile insurgency in the province since long. However, the insurgency became widespread and deadly after the 2006 killing of Baloch chieftain Nawab Akbar Bugti in a military operation.
The Baloch insurgents have been demanding more autonomy and control over natural resources of their province.
Prime Minister’s Adviser on Interior Affairs Rehman Malik, has meanwhile, set a three-day deadline for the Federal Investigation Agency to apprehend all human traffickers. He directed the agency’s chief to submit details of the horrific incident by today (Sunday).
In Quetta, Provincial Home Secretary Naseebullah Bazai said bodies of those killed in Friday’s attack were sent to Karachi, where three of them were identified: two belonged to Gujranwala and the third to Sialkot.
The remaining 15 victims could not be identified. Families have been advised to contact the Edhi Centre in Karachi to identify bodies of their loved ones.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 8th, 2012.