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India-Pakistan
BNP demands Akhtar Mengal's release
2008-02-26
The Balochistan National Party has asked the PPP and the PML-N to immediately release its detained president, Sardar Akhtar Mengal. BNP Information Secretary Sanaullah Baloch told Daily Times that his party welcomed the apology tendered by the PPP to the people of Balochistan. However, he said, if the PPP and the PML-N sought redress for the grievances of the Baloch, then they would quickly secure the release of former chief minister Sardar Akhtar Mengal. He demanded that a “truth commission” be formed to investigate the killing of Nawab Bugti and Balach Marri, and the human rights abuses in the past five years. Separately, BNP leader Professor Nahila Qadiri told a press conference that the new government would not be accepted unless BNP’s leaders were released.
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India-Pakistan
2 govt officials killed in Quetta
2007-11-27
QUETTA: Unidentified people killed two more government officials here on Monday as violence that erupted in the city after the death of Baloch nationalist leader Balach Marri continued. Noshaki District Tehsildar Asghar Mengal and his security guard were ambushed on Dr Bano Road. They succumbed to their injuries in the Civil Hospital. A passerby was also injured in the incident, while the assailants managed to escape from the scene. However, Quetta police said that the incident was result of a tribal feud. Asghar was a close relative of former Balochistan governor Amirul Mulk Mengal.
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India-Pakistan
3 cops killed in Quetta violence
2007-11-24
Three policemen and a minor girl were killed in three separate incidents claimed by the BLA, while several vehicles and official buildings were attacked as protests against the killing of Balach Marri, leader of the BLA, continued for the third day on Friday. A minor girl died in Satellite Town when miscreants hurled a hand grenade at a house. Separately, three more policemen were killed while a fourth was injured, resulting in eight policemen dead in the last three days. The BLA claimed responsibility for all the killings, and also rejected government claims that Nawab Bugti’s grandson had killed Marri. A BLA spokesman alleged that the government was spreading false rumours about the killing of Marri. Meanwhile, police detained dozens of protesters across Balochistan. These people, mainly students, protested the killing of Marri by blocking roads.
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India-Pakistan
Balach Marri's killing : Balochistan shuts down
2007-11-23
More than a hundred protesters were arrested across Balochistan on Thursday as the province observed a complete shutter-down strike against the killing of Nawabzada Balach Marri, a Baloch nationalist leader.

Police rounded up around fifty protesters in Quetta, most of whom had come from Sariab, where Balochis are in a majority. Fifteen protesters were arrested in Gwadar, where the Balochistan National Party, National Party and the Baloch Students Organisation had called for a complete strike. Ten leaders of the National Party were detained in Panjgur district where police used tear gas and baton-charged the protesters. Dozens of protesters were arrested from other provincial districts including Khuzdar, Dalbandin, Turbat, Sibi, Panjgur, Mustung, Noshaki. Life came to a stand still in these districts while protests were largely peaceful.

“A state of red alert has been declared in Quetta with 4,000 police personnel and the Frontier Corps (FC) deployed at different locations. Around 70 mobile teams will continue to patrol Quetta,” the city’s police chief Mohammad Akbar said.

In Quetta, a complete shutter down strike was observed in the Baloch-populated areas where protesters burnt two government vehicles and pelted stones at official buildings. Shops, banks and business centres remained closed. The city government had announced the closure of all educational institutes on Thursday.

However, life continued as usual in the rest of the city. Supporters of Balach Marri also blocked many roads, including the RCD and Mekran Highways for many hours. Meanwhile, three bomb blasts took place in Hub, Balochistan’s industrial town, and Sibi, suspending power supply to many parts of Hub township and damaging the local post office.
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India-Pakistan
Nine arrested for violence following Balach Marri's killing
2007-11-22
Siren voices echoed in the Quetta air throughout Wednesday evening following the eruption of violence in various parts of the provincial capital and districts of Balochistan as the news of Balach Marri’s killing flashed on TV screens, resulting in the death of five persons, mainly personnel of law enforcement agencies.

In Quetta, unidentified persons opened fire on Punjabi settlers in Kalat Street and killed three persons. One of the dead persons includes an inspector. Two were reported to be local residents.

In another incident, two police officers were killed and three injured in the Brewery Police Station area when their patrolling team was ambushed by a mob of angry people. Consequently, a police personnel, Constable Rehmatullah died on the spot while the other police driver, Jumah Khan, perished at the Bolan Medical Complex. The same incident left SHO Khalid Saifullah, Assistant Sub-inspector Mohammad Nasir and Constable Ghulam Farooq injured.
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India-Pakistan
Balach Marri killed: BLA
2007-11-22
Nawabzada Balach Marri, leader of the banned Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), has been killed, with the actual cause of his death still not being confirmed. BLA spokesman Bibarg Baloch confirmed to Daily Times on Wednesday Marri’s death, saying that he would not like to disclose the circumstances, which led to the killing of the Baloch guerilla fighter.

“It is a black day for the Baloch people. Our leader has been martyred,” he said via satellite phone from an undisclosed place. He refused to tell where Marri was killed and how many people had been killed or injured along with him. He said Marri might have been killed in an operation inside the Pakistani border. AFP, meanwhile, quoted a local TV channel as saying that Marri had been killed in Afghanistan.
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India-Pakistan
Akbar Bugti killed in army operation
2006-08-27
More detail on yesterday's story.
Nawab Akbar Bugti, leader of the Bugti tribe, president of the Jamhoori Watan Party and the driving force behind the anti-government rebellion in Balochistan, was killed in a massive military operation in the Bhambore Hills, an area between the cities of Kohlu and Dera Bugti. “Yes, Nawab Bugti has been killed in the operation,” Federal Information Minister Mohammad Ali Durrani said on Saturday.

“As many as 21 army commandos and 37 rebels had also been killed in the operation...”
According to reports, President Pervez Musharraf was told just before 12am on Sunday that Nawab Bugti had been killed. As many as 21 army commandos and 37 rebels had also been killed in the same operation, which targeted 50 to 80 of Nawab Bugti’s closest family members and top commanders. Reports also indicated that Balochistan Liberation Army Chief Balach Marri and Nawab Bugti’s grandsons Brahamdagh and Mir Ali Bugti were also killed in the fighting.

“Reports also indicated that Balochistan Liberation Army Chief Balach Marri and Nawab Bugti’s grandsons Brahamdagh and Mir Ali Bugti were also killed in the fighting. ”
Nawab Bugti’s location was discovered three days ago and security forces had besieged the hills where he was in hiding. Sources said that Nawab Bugti’s whereabouts were established by monitoring satellite phone intercepts. “It is presumed that Akbar Bugti and a number of other terrorists have been killed,” an official statement issued at 2am said.
"Presumed" implies they haven't found his corpse...
It said that heavy fire was exchanged, which resulted in a cave-in, which buried all those inside, including Nawab Bugti and a large number of his top aides.
Dropped the whole hill on 'em, didja? Well, that'll work, usually...
An ISPR statement said that two army helicopters, flying over the general area of Tartani in Kohlu on August 23, were fired upon from the ground and one helicopter was damaged. Another chopper was then dispatched to investigate and was also hit, but returned safely. According to AFP, security officials said that the military launched air strikes on Friday against a cave complex in the mountains on the border of the Dera Bugti and Kohlu districts, where the chieftain was said to be hiding. There was little fighting on the ground, they said.

“The missile raid destroyed the entrance to the rocky hideout and special forces moved in on Saturday to carry out a ‘cordon and search operation’...”
The missile raid destroyed the entrance to the rocky hideout and special forces moved in on Saturday to carry out a ‘cordon and search operation’, one security official told AFP. Heavy fighting broke out as the insurgents returned fire, killing several soldiers including the leader of the commando team, the official said. The soldiers eventually secured the area and ascertained that Bugti was among the dead, he added, without giving further details.

Sources said that around 24 Marri and Bugti tribesmen, including Nawab Bugti, were killed and 37 injured. The injured have been taken into custody by security forces, sources said. However there is no information on whether the corpses would be handed over to their respective tribes for burial or they would remain in security officials’ custody. Six officers were also among the 21 security force personnel killed, an official told Reuters.
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India-Pakistan
38 Marri loyalists surrender
2006-08-03
The Balochistan government claimed on Wednesday that members of the Marri tribe had for the first time begun surrendering to the government, following in the footsteps of former loyalists to Nawab Akber Khan Bugti.

Government officials said that 38 former loyalists of Nawabzada Balach Marri, the Moscow-educated purported chief of the banned Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), had surrendered to the Kohlu administration. They also gave up a large number of weapons including rocket launchers, Kalashnikovs and ammunition, while pledging to refrain from participating in movements against the government, the sources added.

The surrendering team is led by Wadera Jumma Khan, a prominent elder from the Marri tribe, said one source. "This is just the beginning of a new era of success for the government," said Raziq Bugti, Balochistan government spokesman, while talking to Daily Times.
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India-Pakistan
Balochistan insurgency: Mengal doesn't trust govt
2006-07-09
QUETTA: International mediation to resolve the Balochistan crisis is needed because the government and the Baloch people have reached a point where neither trusts the other, said Sardar Akhtar Mengal, former chief minister of Balochistan. "We don't trust Musharraf, his army and his political representatives," said Mengal at a press conference on Saturday.

Mengal said the Baloch wanted the United Nations or the European Union to settle the issue between the Pakistan government and Baloch leaders. Mengal, the president of the Balochistan National Party, condemned the military operation in Dera Bugti and alleged that seven civilians were killed by security forces in the Marri and Bugti areas. " Some eight to 10 jet fighters and 12 helicopters bombed Dera Bugti for three days. They (the security forces) wanted to target Nawab Akbar Bugti, his grandson Brahamdag Bugti and Mir Balach Marri. The army is engaged in target killings," he alleged.
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India-Pakistan
No action against Balach Marri yet
2006-04-24
The Interior Ministry has not yet asked the Balochistan government to take action against Baloch MPA Balach Marri, who is believed to head the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA).

Official sources told Daily Times that the Interior Ministry was trying to find solid evidence of Marri's direct involvement in the sabotage activities attributed to the BLA.

On April 9, the government banned the BLA under the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997 and decided to arrest its operatives and freeze its bank accounts.

Investigators think that Marri's arrest may lead them to a dead end because they have no authentic information yet about BLA operatives or their whereabouts, sources said. They want to track BLA's hidden activities, its sources of funding and its chain of command, sources added.

Soon after the ban on the BLA, Marri denied links with it, but praised it for demanding that Baloch have complete control of Balochistan's natural resources.
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India-Pakistan
Pakistan brands Baluch rebel group terror outfit
2006-04-10
Pakistan has branded an underground militant group operating in the restive southwestern province of Baluchistan a "terrorist" organisation, officials said yesterday. "The federal government has declared Baluchistan Liberation Army (BLA) as terrorist organisation over its involvement in sabotage and subversive activities," provincial police chief, Chaudhry Mohammad Yaqub, told AFP. He said Baluchistan police had arrested an unspecified number of militants who confessed they had been receiving money and weapons from the group for attacks on government installations. "BLA itself had been claiming responsibility after almost every incident," Yaqub said.

He said now the group was officially a terrorist organisation, its name could not appear in the Pakistani media. The police chief said the group was allegedly led by a provincial deputy, Balach Marri, who was facing several criminal charges including landmine blasts and bomb explosions. "He will now lose his seat in the provincial assembly," he said.

The BLA leader's brother Gazin Marri, who served as provincial home minister from 1993-96, was arrested in Dubai late last month on charges of money laundering, he said. "This confirms our belief that the group had been receiving funds from abroad," Yaqub said without giving details.

Along with some nationalist tribes the BLA has been waging a sporadic revolt in recent years in sparsely populated Baluchistan to win more political rights and a greater share of profits from the region's rich natural resources. The government launched a fresh crackdown in Baluchistan after militants fired rockets in the town of Kohlu during a visit by President Pervez Musharraf last December.
Firing up Perv was a move of singular brilliance, since I don't think they came within a mile of him. Whether they're a terrorist organization or not is another matter. As I've pointed out on a few occasions, there are differences between terrorists and guerrilla organizations, and the BLA fits the latter to a tee. They don't as a matter of policy make war on civilians, keeping for the most part to attacks on military targets and infrastructure. There's a qualitative difference, even given that they're Bugtis and Marris and suchlike primitives, between them and the genuine terrorists infesting North and South Wazoo. They're not the ones lopping off heads and organizing roving bands of fascisti and hanging people. Akbar Bugti's probably got a black belt in evil, but I wouldn't call him a terrorist. A perfidious bastard, yes; a tyrant, yes; a terrorist, no.
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India-Pakistan
NYT declares Baluch insurgency "a civil war"
2006-04-02
Explosions at gas pipelines and railroad tracks are common in this remote desert region. Now, roadside bombs and artillery shells are, too. More than 100 civilians have been killed in recent months, along with dozens of government security forces, local residents and Pakistan's Human Rights Commission say.

This is the other front of Pakistan's widening civil unrest, not the tribal areas along the Afghan border where the United States would like the government to press a campaign against Islamic militants, but the restive province of Baluchistan, home to an intensifying insurgency.

It is here, say local leaders and opposition politicians, that Pakistan, an important ally in the United States' campaign against terrorism, has diverted troops from the fight against Al Qaeda and the Taliban to settle old scores as it seeks to develop the region's valuable oil and gas reserves.

One visit makes it clear that, despite official denials, the government is waging a full-scale military campaign here. Rebel leaders say they have several thousand men under arms, fighting what they estimate are 23,000 Pakistani troops.

During a 24-hour trek on camel, horse and foot across the rugged, stony terrain in early March, the fighting was plain to see. Military jets and surveillance planes flew over the area, and long-range artillery lighted up the distant night sky.

This fight is altogether separate from the Taliban insurgency on Afghanistan's border or the Shiite-Sunni violence that sporadically flares in and around the provincial capital, Quetta, and it threatens to dwarf the nation's other conflicts.

It is about the ethnic rights and self-rule of the Baluch people, who are distinct among Pakistanis. They speak their own language, Baluchi, which has its roots in Persian, and are probably the oldest settlers in the region.

In particular, tensions have been aggravated by President Pervez Musharraf's determination to develop the area's oil and gas fields, the largest in the country, as well as his aim to build a pipeline across the region to carry oil from Iran and a strategic deep sea port to expand trade with China, local residents say.

They charge that General Musharraf has shown little regard for their concerns and that for years their province has received paltry royalties on its resources, while remaining one of the country's poorest regions.

The government has branded two of the rebel leaders, Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti, nearly 80, and Balach Marri, 40, "miscreants," outlaws who oppose economic development to retain a hold over their tribes.

In an interview under the shade of a rocky overhang, Mr. Bugti and Mr. Marri, who share the names of the tribes they lead, dismissed the charges. They are not opposed to economic development, they said, but rather to the Pakistani government's military campaign to suppress them.

"The military government has imposed military rule and this has forced the Baluch to defend their land and resources against the might of the armed forces of Pakistan assembled in our area," Mr. Bugti said, perched in a carved wooden armchair as tribesmen sat around him cradling Kalashnikov rifles.

"The dispute is about the national rights of the Baluch," he added, "and if the government accepted these rights then there would be no dispute."

Mr. Bugti and others said that the government was using its American-supplied jets and helicopter gunships against them. They said they had found bomb fragments with "Made in U.S.A." stamped on them.

Indeed, huge craters and fragments from American-designed MK-82 bombs lay beside a badly damaged school in the village of Mararar, the results of a bombing raid that the Baluch fighters said had occurred at the beginning of March.

Another bombing raid on or around March 14 hit two bulldozers building a road, the fighters said. A collection of bomb fragments gathered by tribesmen from other raids revealed a "valve solenoid" made in New York, and part of a gas generator made in Mesa, Ariz.

Last year, the Baluch political leaders presented a 15-point agenda to the central government. The demands included greater control of the province's resources, protection for the Baluch minority and a halt to the building of military bases that local residents say have proliferated here.

Concern over the issues had been building for years, said Suret Khan Marri, a historian living in Quetta, the provincial capital, and the concerns and violence reach far beyond the Bugti and Marri tribes.

"The movement is there," he said in an interview. "Sometimes it is crushed. Now it is the fifth insurgency, and it has spread all across the Baluch area."

Armed resistance by Baluch nationalists has been a repeating occurrence since the birth of Pakistan in 1947, when tribal leaders, Mr. Bugti among them, only grudgingly joined Pakistan after having ruled independent territories under the British.

The bitterness today is such that the tribal leaders compare the situation to the 1970's, when Bangladesh broke from Pakistan. "If grievances have come to this level — that we do not mind if Pakistan disintegrates — then things are bad," Mr. Marri, the rebel leader, said.

The terrain here is marked by harsh, rocky desert, rising into craggy mountains and cut through with narrow gorges that supply many hiding places for shepherds, or guerrilla fighters. In the summer, temperatures soar to more than 120 degrees.

The shadowy Baluchistan Liberation Army, one of three armed resistance groups born in the 1970's, has claimed responsibility for many of the recent attacks, including the killing of three Chinese engineers working on the deep sea port, at Gwadar. Mr. Marri said that he did not know who was leading the group, but that it was neither a Bugti nor a Marri.

The most recent violence has included summary killings of settlers from the Punjab, whom Baluch nationalists blame for stealing jobs and land.

Hundreds of political party members, students, doctors and tribal leaders have been detained by government security forces, many disappearing for months, even years, without trials in well-documented cases. Some have been tortured or have died in custody, say officials of Pakistan's Human Rights Commission.

A Baluch doctor, Bari Langove, 36, said he had examined a student leader, Dr. Allah Nasar Baloch, in a prison ward in Quetta six months ago and found him so debilitated that he could neither walk nor talk at first.

"He was mentally exhausted and wholly unable to speak," Dr. Langove said in an interview in Quetta. "We examined him and found he had post-traumatic stress disorder, symptoms of loss of short-term memory, insomnia, loss of appetite and energy."

In places like Dera Bugti and Kohlu, government forces have carried out reprisals against villagers, Baluch leaders and human rights officials say. In a case documented by the Human Rights Commission, the Frontier Corps, a paramilitary force commanded by army officers, killed 12 men from Pattar Nala on Jan. 11 after a mine explosion near the village killed some of its soldiers.

Two old men from the village who went to the base to collect the bodies were also killed. The next day, the 14 bodies were handed over to the women of the village.

Local fighters say the Frontier Corps has carried out 42 such reprisal killings in the last three months, the latest involving six villagers during the week of March 6.

The government offensive began after a rocket attack on General Musharraf as he opened a military base in Kohlu on Dec. 17 — an attack for which officials blamed Marri rebels, and Mr. Marri in particular.

Shortly afterward, government forces stormed the town of Dera Bugti, Mr. Bugti said, adding that they were burning shops and houses there still, including his family home.

The government has played down the fighting, and denies that the Pakistani Army is even deployed in Baluchistan, saying that it is merely using the Frontier Corps to run a police operation to stem violence.

In interviews, the police chief, Chaudhry Muhammad Yakub, put the number of rebels at no more than 1,000. The provincial governor, Owais Ahmed Ghani, said 36,000 Frontier Corps soldiers were deployed in Baluchistan, with two-thirds concentrated along the Afghan border. Both predicted that the Baluchistan conflict would be over within two months.

In all this, Mr. Bugti is an unexpected participant. He has been a prominent player in regional politics for many years and was governor of Baluchistan. He has spent time in detention on charges of murder during a long and colorful life.

Educated under the British Raj, he is a man from a bygone era, who said he attended the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in London in 1953.

Now, forced to flee his home, he lives an austere life, camping out under the stars with his loyal tribesmen, a Kalashnikov propped by his aluminum walking stick.

"I have had a good and full life," he said, unperturbed. "It is better to die quickly in the mountains than slowly in your bed."

He warned that the government would be foolish not to negotiate with the senior tribal leaders. "If we are removed from the scene, I can guarantee the government will have a heck of a time from the younger generation, because they are more extreme," he said.

One of his grandsons, Brahamdagh, 25, is commanding the Bugti resistance fighters, and he appeared silently every so often to brief his grandfather. He took to the mountains in 2002 with just 50 to 60 men.

Brahamdagh contended that he now had more than 2,000 fighters in Dera Bugti and thousands more civilian helpers. He said the Marris had roughly the same number in Kohlu. In addition, small cells of fighters are in every district of the province, he said.

"There are so many groups," he said. "Three to four guys get together and decide what to do, to hit a railway or a bus. We are showing our bitterness. We are fighting the government to show we are not happy with you and you should leave our homeland."

Mr. Marri, who arrived unannounced one afternoon, on foot and accompanied by a dozen armed fighters, is another of the younger generation. The third son of the leader of the Marri tribe, he has spent most of his life outside Pakistan.

In 2002, he returned to run for Parliament but spent most of his time in his home in Kohlu, the capital of the Kohlu district, until forced to flee by the government offensive. "If they think they can pressure us like this, then they don' t know us," he warned. "The Baluch people have woken up."

The Human Rights Commission and opposition political parties have urged both sides to seek a political solution to the conflict. Yet at the moment there is no dialogue.

Two parliamentary committees set up last year to look into Baluch grievances have stalled, and General Musharraf has been blunt in his determination to use force against anyone opposing his vision for the region.

In their mountain stronghold, Mr. Bugti and Mr. Marri, and a third leader, Ataullah Mengal, in his home in Karachi, are disparaging about talks with the government.

"They are not worth sitting with at the table," Mr. Marri said. "The general keeps offering peanuts when my rights are at stake. We are not against negotiations, but only negotiations that are worthwhile."

Mr. Bugti offered his own grim prognosis. "I don' t see it ending," he said.
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