Let There Be A Referendum In
Balochistan
26 Feb 2012
By Saeed Qureshi
In the wake of inexorably heightening insurgency and
swelling separatist movements in Balochistan, the most
direct and anecdotal recipe of this festering wound is
the holding of a rereferendum without further loss of
time. If the government believes that there are a few
handful, anti-federation and secessionist elements, it
should go into the preparation of such a referendum to
elicit from the Baluchis whether they would wish to
stay within the federation of Pakistan or become
independent.
The Chaos in Balochistan is a mammoth challenge and
might become a replay of former East Pakistan if not
addressed as the outstanding and top most priority
issue. Because of escalating fires of insurgency, the
territorial integrity, the writ and sovereignty of
state of Pakistan is at stake. How long would the
agencies and the army run this volatile province with
terror, oppression, intimidation, ruthless persecution
and horrific extra judicial killings?
While taking such a crucial decision and announcing it
well in advance of the projected referendum, the
government can withdraw the bulk of the dreaded
military and para-military network from Balochistan,
that has come under burgeoning scrutiny and censure
even from such elements who do not want to see this
land being cut off through an armed struggle,
rebellion or insurgency from the rest of Pakistan.
In 1971 Pakistan lost the Eastern wing, and now the
biggest, geographically contiguous and strategically
crucial part seems to be moving towards the verge of
breaking away. The catching of this wild bull by horn
is also indispensible as later it could prompt other
two provinces; Sindh and NWFP to follow suit; not
immediately yet in the longer run. Let us not repeat
the blunder that Pakistanis military and civilian
leadership committed in case of erstwhile East
Pakistan.
If the separatist elements that are being supported
and abetted with weapons and money and propaganda, by
foreign inimical forces one of which is India,
Pakistan may finally disintegrate and all the four
provinces might also become independent states. This
dreadful scenario might entail Punjab taken over by
India and annexed with the East Punjab. India can also
slice away a portion of Sindh. Pakhtunkhwa may also
opt for independence. Thus Pakistan as a state would
disappear from the world map.
The paramount interests of China, a trustworthy and
all weather-friend of Pakistan, would also suffer, as
the New Baloch government would likely be dancing on
American and Indian tunes. The root cause for America
and India to foster and foment insurgency and
perpetual instability in Balochistan is the Gawadar
port that was built by China and can serve as a huge
facility for China for overland trading, besides
exercising massive influence in the Persian Gulf
precincts.
A volatile Balochistan ultimately getting out of the
federation of Pakistan and emerging as an independent
country would be a protégé of both America and India.
That eventuality can provide them a rare and unique
opportunity to destabilize Iran and also keep a watch
over Afghanistan, the Central Asia and the Strait of
Harmuz.
Balochistan has remained neglected and no meaningful
and far reaching policies, projects or plans have ever
been contemplated to take this region out of poverty,
create widespread road network to link it with the
rest of Pakistan, set up industries to provide jobs to
the local population and explore the hidden natural
resources with allocation of major share of proceeds
and income to the province. Balochistan is as rugged,
obsolete and backward as it has even been, before and
after the inception of Pakistan.
The dream of the separatist elements for creation of
greater Balochistan cannot be realized as Iran would
not relinquish her hold over their part of Balochistan.
In comparison to Pakistan, Iran's control over their
part of Balochistan is firm and unshakable.
A referendum would make it manifest for all time to
come if the Baluchis would wish to stay within
Pakistan or go their own way. Keeping in view the
ethnic divide and almost the equal proportion between
Baluchis and Pashtoons and some 20 per cent non
Baluchis races living in Balochistan, the verdict or
the outcome of such referendum would not be entirely
in favor of the secessionists.
But as long as that is not proven through the
referendum, the secessionists would not recoil from
their demand which can even gather more steam if this
incendiary issue is not dealt with politically and by
getting a fresh mandate via the popular opinion.
There are several precedents of such referendums. One
of these outstanding referendums was conducted in
Canada for eliciting the choice of the French speaking
citizens in Quebec province whether they wanted to be
independent or remain within the Canada. Incredibly
and against all predictions, the Quebec residents
decided to live within the commonwealth of Canada and
this thorny and perennially troubling issue for
Canadian federation was resolved once and for all.
Referendums on independence as demanded by Party
Québécois were conducted in 1980 and1995. Both were
voted down by voters, the latter defeated by a very
narrow margin.
In 2006, the Canadian House of Commons passed a
symbolic motion, the Québécois nation motion,
recognizing the "Québécois as a nation within a united
Canada.
The Balochistan conflict is the offshoot of the
accession of Kalat with Pakistan in 1948 by the then
Kalat ruler Mir Ahmed Yar Khan. Prince Abdul Karim
Khan (the brother of Mir Ahmed Khan) who had rejected
the Khan of Kalat's decision to accede to Pakistan led
a small fighting force to restore the independence of
Kalat state but was subdued by the Pakistan army.
That conflict was followed by four more subsequent
similar conflicts by Baloch dissidents. The second
conflict was spearheaded by Nawab Nowroz khan in
1958-59.The third was started by She Muhammad Bijrani
Marri in 1963-69.The final and the fifth organized
insurgency was launched in 2004 by Nawab Akbar Khan
Bugti and Mir Balach Marri in the wake of which Nawab
Bugti was killed in August 2006.
On August 12, 2009, Khan of Kalat Mir Suleiman Dawood
declared himself ruler of Balochistan and set up a
Council for Independent Balochistan that contains "all
separatist leaders including Nawab Bramdagh Bugti. The
Council's also claimed Baloch territory in Iran
besides that of the Pakistani Balochistan. However, it
excluded the Afghan Baloch regions.
The cessation movements braced against Pakistan's
federal government, its army and are active for
creating an independent Balochistan, are varied and
multiple. These are Parrari (later replaced by BPLF),
Baloch Republic army, Baloch Autonomist Movement,
Baloch Peoples' Liberation Front, Balochistan National
Liberation Front, Balochistan National Movement and
Jundullah.
Jundullah is alleged to receive support from the
United States against the government of Iran, although
the US denies any involvement. It is a militant entity
that is based in Balochistan and is fighting for the
rights of Iranian Taliban in Afghanistan. The other
supporters of Jundullah are said to be the Iraqi
Intelligence Service, Pakistani Sunni extremist group
Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan and the Mujahedin e-Khalq.
Although Balochistan is the largest (44% of the
country's area) region of Pakistan, it is the least
populated (8 million population) and the least
developed area. The demographic complexion is rather
diverse that might provide a saving grace and a
cushion to federation to rescue the situation from a
total collapse.
The Baloch speaking population that is fully involved
in insurgency or rebellion is around 40 per cent of
the total population. The Pashtu speaking population
has the same percentage of 40 per cent. The remaining
segments like Sindhis, Punjabis, Siraiki and Brohi are
around 20 per cent.
Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani's announcement to
soon hold an All Parties Conference on Balochistan is
a belated yet good decision to attend to this most
delicate and pressing issue. But this initiative would
remain a non starter unless voluminously represented
by all shades of public opinion and wider array of
political parties and even the separatist groups.
The inclusion of separatist groups in such conference
can be least expected but the political parties from
Balochistan should be motivated and persuaded to take
part for finding some resolution of this mess that if
not handled dexterously would land Pakistan into a
geographical catastrophe.
It would be difficult for Baluchis and Pashtoons to be
unanimous on one united Balochistan even if they
manage to secede or given maximum autonomy through a
political process. The Pashtoons deem themselves as a
different ethnic entity and their rivalry with Baloch
race is deep rooted and trenchant. As such one can
anticipate a long civil war between the Baluchis and
Pashtoons if the separatist movments somehow succeeds
in wresting away this largest province from the rest
of Pakistan.
The Balochi revolutionaries, nationalists and rebels
would not be able to capture the Iranian part of
Balochistan no matter they fight for ages. Iran would
not tolerate the chunks of their territory torn away
by Baloch separatists to make that a part of greater
Balochistan.
The Baloch secessionists should eschew the foreign
support for separation as their interest could be best
served by remaining allied with Pakistan as was
proclaimed and consented by them at the time of the
creation of Pakistan in August 1947.
As such the best way-out for disparate and myriad
separatist Baloch liberation movments and groups is to
live within the federation of Pakistan and demand an
autonomous status as was given to Quebec by the
Canadndian federation. One of the stipulations of this
autonomy should be a major portion of income from
their natural resources and control of those resources
by Baluchis themselves.
Keeping in view the tribal nature of Baloch society
and their colliding interests, Balochistan, in case of
an independent land, would turn into another
Afghanistan with an interminable civil war between the
war lords and tribal chiefs and Sardars for sway and
control over the country. Thus what they could achieve
through a separatist movement would be wasted away by
internal feuds and fighting, exposing that vast land,
once again, to further disintegration.
Pashtoons claim parity between themselves and Baluchis
and want to be part of Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa. Pashtoons
and Baluchis have been separated into different
administrative units till 1970. Balochi population is
concentrated in the sparsely populated west, east,
south and south of Balochistan; the Brohis in the
center, while the Pashtoons are the majority in the
north with Quetta as the main city. Two million Afghan
refugees also live in and around Quetta. The proposed
APC must discuss Pashtoons and Baluchis as separate
entities, their mutual integration and how both can be
amicably accommodated within one united Pakistan.
There are anti-Pakistan politicians in both American
Senate and House of Representatives that daringly
oppose Pakistan. This lobby, on the hand is, pro-India
while on the other do not miss any chance to malign
and despise Pakistan despite its being a close ally of
the United States.
The chairman of the sub-committee on Oversight and
Investigations of the U.S. House Foreign Affairs
Committee, Dana Rohrabacher, introduced, a resolution
last Friday in Congress, in support of the "right of
self-determination of the Balochi people, for being
victims of human rights violations and oppression
despite being the largest province".
Although the ill-timed resolution has been widely
condemned in Pakistan by all sections of society, it
nevertheless indicates that United States is now
contemplating to openly support the insurgency of the
dissident Baluchis against both Pakistan and Iran for
an independent Balochistan.
"Selig S. Harrison of the George Soros-funded Center
for International Policy has called for dividing
Pakistan and supporting an independent Baluch province
as a means of weakening any alliance between Islamabad
and Beijing. Relations between the two countries have
warmed, with Pakistan granting China access to a naval
base at Gawadar. Similar views have been promoted by
Ralph Peters, a strategic affairs analyst, former U.S.
Army officer, and an expert on the Middle East and the
Islamic world."
These are extremely ominous indicators and direly
forewarn about the coming events and situations that
might be difficult for Pakistan to deal with. It
should be unmistakably understood that while United
States is getting out Afghanistan, she is trying to be
relocated in a more vulnerable and safer haven called
Balochistan.
Pakistan needs to focus on Baluchistan's ballooning
imbroglio with utmost urgency and in order to find a
political solution of this complicated tangle for
which the best course is to hold referendum. The
Pakistan government should create conducive
environment in advance, to pave way for pro Pakistan
votes, so that the federation of Pakistan and its
geographical cohesiveness can be saved and shored up.
©
EsinIslam.Com
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