Stop lying about the Baloch issue

Talks cannot begin till some issues on Balochistan are admitted and words are followed up with action.


Yaqoob Khan Bangash October 01, 2012
Stop lying about the Baloch issue

Balochistan has hit the news again and as usual, everyone is ‘talking’ about the ‘issue’ and not doing anything. Everyone says that we need to have ‘dialogue’ and grant the Baloch their ‘rights’ but not a single politician is prepared to actually initiate the dialogue or honestly grant them their rights. Every single government has talked about ‘solving’ the issue, but has only aggravated the situation. Why has this happened? One simple reason is that we keep lying to ourselves and the Baloch about simply everything. While the list is long, let me highlight just a few issues which need to be admitted in order to even initiate a solution to the problem.

First, the Baloch insurgency is not new and while it has friends abroad, is not foreign-led. The Baloch have risen in revolt in 1948, 1958, the 1960s, 1973-7, and now since 2005. Five revolts since the inception of Pakistan are a clear indication that this is something significant and local. Yes, it is true that several Baloch leaders have friends in India, but to believe that India has been supporting an insurgency for the last 60 years and has still not been able to dismember Pakistan is simply disingenuous. Official Pakistani versions of history blame India for the separation of East Pakistan, so if India does indeed know how to dismember Pakistan, I wonder why it is not using the same tactics to the same level of success in this case? Therefore, we need to stop passing the buck and accept that the Baloch insurgency is a local issue.

Secondly, distrust of Pakistan, let alone of the Punjabis, and the establishment runs deep in the Baloch psyche. Some opinions hold that the Baloch lands never really wanted to become a part of Pakistan and months of scheming by the latter and pressure on the Khan of Kalat, led to its accession. Also, the Baloch are not simply going to forget that they were the last people to get natural gas from their own lands, and that the royalty for that gas was almost half of what was given elsewhere. They are also not going to forget the thousands of people killed by the Pakistani state since 1948. Resistance against the Pakistani state has almost become part of the Baloch identity and is not easy to shake off. Therefore, Pakistan needs to come up with a new and creative way to deal with the issue. The Baloch might want to remain in Pakistan, but for that to happen, Pakistan needs to create a new dispensation. The current political and constitutional framework has not worked for them and trying to impose it again will not work. A new method needs to be devised, which gives the Baloch maximum autonomy and satisfies their will of self-rule. Pakistan simply needs to understand that keeping people in the federation against their will and without their agreement is not a viable option and will only lead to further internal disintegration and violence.

Thirdly, the government needs to seriously consider the six points elucidated by Akhtar Mengal. The fact that Mengal came to Pakistan from exile to present his case before the Supreme Court shows that he, and I hope other Baloch leaders, are willing to compromise. However, rather than immediately picking up on the six points and meeting Mengal, the government is yet to respond to the points, and the prime minister and the president have yet to meet Mengal. To even begin to solve the issue, the government needs to publicly, unequivocally and substantially, take action on these points.

Fourthly, the issue is at the moment a ‘Baloch’ issue. Due to historic and other reasons, the Pashtuns of Balochistan have not risen up in revolt against Pakistan. However, the current state of the province is affecting the Pashtuns badly and could translate into an armed revolt against Pakistan.

Akhtar Mengal has compared the Baloch situation to that of East Pakistan and has warned of a ‘divorce’ if his sensible plan goes unheeded. We have already suffered a dismemberment of Pakistan; do we really want to bury our heads in the sand, lie and ignore, while only talking about this issue too?

Published in The Express Tribune, October 2nd, 2012.

COMMENTS (21)

Kwatta71 | 12 years ago | Reply

In Balochistan Pashtoons are living on their own historical land and they are demanding the restoration of Chief Commissioner Province (British Balochistan) which was established in 1887 by English rulers. The founder of the nation also in his famous 14 point demanded the up gradation of Chief Commissioner Province as a Governor Province. The Pashtoon majority province existed till 1954 and during one unit it maintained itself as a separate administrative unit under Quetta division. In 1970 when the other provinces were restored , the historical Pashtoon majority province was merged with Baloch land and wrongly named as Balochistan. Since then the Pashtoons of Balochistan are struggling for parity in the province but all in vain. Now its time for all the democratic forces of the country to accept the rightful demand of Pashtoon and restore the Chief Commissioner Province. Pashtoon and Baloch never lived and cant live in one administrative unit any more.

cut | 12 years ago | Reply

@ Khurram Awan let me tell you one thing that Punjabis are the most hated community in India and until Punjab was divided into Pieces in India other Indians never felt at ease. Similarly the Punjabi hatred is almost in every community ..... to divide Punjab like India into Smaller Pieces as whatever............................... . Punjabi's in India were/are never hated.You will find Punjabi's in all the cities of India from Srinagar to down south Chennai.They are the most enterprising and hard working community. Indian Punjab was divided on linguistic basis.Haryana and Himachal Pradesh were carved out of Punjab because people of these region spoke Hindi/dialect of Hindi and were not Punjabi speaking population. In fact since then Indian Punjab is among the highest per capita income state of India,and Indian Punjabi's are prospering all over India.

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