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APC on Balochistan deferred: The Nation, Aug 22

By Abrar Saeed
ISLAMABAD – The Parliamentary Committee on Balochistan which met here under the chair of Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani on Friday considered granting general amnesty to Baloch separatists if they agreed to lay down arms.
The meeting also reviewed overall political and law and order situation of the province.
The sources privy to the deliberations of the meeting informed TheNation that the government in that regard would take all major political stakeholders into confidence and as soon as the consultation process would be completed, the formal announcement in that connection would be made.
The sources further said that the government had deferred to summon All Parties Conference on Balochistan for the time being, as most of the members of the committee were of the view that majority of the demands of the province would be met through NFC Award and constitutional reforms process undertaken by the parliamentary committee to remove distortions from the Constitution.
The sources close to Pakistan People’s Party informed that Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) was willing to do something concrete to win the confidence of the Baloch nationalists and in that connection PML-N leadership had given the affirmative nod to support the move of granting general amnesty to the Baloch separatists, provided they would lay down their arms and join the mainstream politics.
During the meeting, the Prime Minister reiterated his resolve that the government was committed to mitigate the sufferings of Baloch people and would come up with a comprehensive development package for the most backward province. He recalled that PPP government soon after coming into power had not only apologised from the Baloch people for the apathy towards them by the federal government. He said that he himself announced financial package for Balochistan to help it handle the financial problems.
The committee members included Senator Mian Raza Rabbani, Federal Ministers Makhdoom Amin Fahim, Syed Khurshid Shah, Syed Naveed Qamar and Dr Zaheerudin Babar Awan and President PPP Balochistan, Senator Nawabzada Haji Mir Lashkari Raisani. http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/Politics/22-Aug-2009/APC-on-Balochistan-defered

August 22, 2009   No Comments

Baloch question: op-ed in The News, Aug 22

By Tayyab Siddiqui
The writer is a former ambassador of Pakistan

It is puzzling that despite everyone believing that the situation in Balochistan has reached menacing proportions, nothing concrete has been done so far. Farahatullah Babar, the spokesman for the president, claims that there is a ‘rethink’ of the Balochistan policy and that “almost every fortnight, there is a meeting in the presidency on Balochistan in which all stakeholders take part.” Questions, however, remain: what are the outcomes of these meetings and how and when will this ‘consensus-based approach’ deliver?

The issues to be resolved are known to all and have been identified for a long time. Simply put, these are provincial autonomy, mysterious kidnappings of political activists, detention of political workers, increasing security operations in the province and undertaking of mega projects without addressing concerns of the people. The endemic issues of grinding poverty and backwardness merit equally urgent attention and alleviation. Former senator, Sanaullah Baloch, the unofficial spokesman for Baloch nationalists, maintains that “90 per cent of the province’s population lives without gas facility, 78 per cent without electricity and 62 per cent without safe drinking water. Balochistan has just 3.4 per cent of gas consumers as compared to 64 per cent of Punjab alone, which produces only 4.75 per cent of natural gas.” He further asserts that border and coastal security is 100 per cent controlled by non-Baloch paramilitary forces. Around 70,000 jobs in the Frontier Corps, Coastguards, police, Maritime Security and the ANF are occupied by non-locals. Even if these statistics are a little exaggerated or out-dated, the question is how critical the situation should get to invite action.

There is not even a single person in the entire political spectrum of the country who doubts the legitimacy of Baloch demands and that the province has suffered from neglect for too long and can’t brook further delay. The official statements of India’s involvement in the ongoing insurgency and alleged training of the BLA in Afghanistan may be relevant to the situation but no obstacle in the resolution of the crisis. Fundamentally, the issues facing us in Balochistan are of governance, discrimination, lack of representation and participation in the affairs of the province. These are the real issues. It should be a matter of utmost concern when the governor of the province goes on record to complain that “although I am a representative of the federal government, I was never taken into confidence by Islamabad on the Balochistan issues.”

Despite security operations at different times since then the province has not seen peace and normalcy. The situation became worse in the wake of Nawab Bugti’s killing in August 2006 and subsequent mysterious killings of three senior Baloch nationalist leaders. There have also been instances of increasing number of missing persons and of alleged involvement of security agencies in these disappearances, numbered in the thousands, but officially accepted only as 831.

We are confronted with a sea of seething unrest bordering on a widespread insurgency. Feelings of extreme economic deprivation and political victimisation are a lethal combination and demand radical, positive measures to stem the tide. Seeking solutions through setting up committees and conferences will not work. Palliatives like PPP’s apology (February 2006) just don’t work anymore. http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=194214

August 22, 2009   No Comments