India-Pakistan |
Former minister Gazeen Marri detained in Quetta jail under MPO |
2017-09-30 |
[DAWN] After an Anti-terrorism court in Sibi granted bail to Nawabzada Gazeen Marri, the son of Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri in a 2004 murder case on Friday, Quetta district administration detained him under Section 3 of the Maintenance of Public Order. According to a blurb issued by the Quetta deputy commissioner, Marri was shifted to district jail Quetta amid tight security under the MPO. Section 3 of the MPO states: "The government, if satisfied that with a view to preventing any person from acting in any manner prejudicial to public safety or the maintenance of public order, may by an order in writing direct his arrest and detention." Earlier today, ATC judge Muhammad Rafiq Langove granted bail to the former home minister in connection with a murder case registered against Marri in 2004 at the Manjara levies station Kohlu, and asked him to submit surety bonds worth Rs0.4 million. A landmine blast in Kohlu's Mavand tehsil in June 2004 had killed civilians. Subsequently, the Levies had registered murder and terrorism cases against Gazeen Marri. |
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Baloch leader Khair Bakhsh Marri dies |
2014-06-12 |
[DAWN] Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri, a veteran politician and head of Balochistan![]() ...the Pak province bordering Kandahar and Uruzgun provinces in Afghanistan and Sistan Baluchistan in Iran. Its native Baloch propulation is being displaced by Pashtuns and Punjabis and they aren't happy about it... 's Marri clan, died after a protracted illness on Tuesday night. He was 86. A relative of the Marri family told Dawn that the Baloch leader had been admitted to a private hospital last week after his condition deteriorated. Although he had been suffering from back pain for several years which crippled his routine movement, a neurological problem caused him to be admitted to the hospital, said the relative. Nawab Marri had gone into coma a day earlier and never recovered. Family sources said the date and time of his funeral and whether to bury him in his ancestral town of Kohlu or in Quetta would be decided later. "His sons and many relatives are abroad and we are in contact with them to take a decision," they added. |
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India-Pakistan |
Baloch Nationalist Groups Suspend Their Armed Activities Indefinitely |
2008-09-03 |
ISLAMABAD - In a dramatic move, three leading insurgent Baloch nationalist groups have suspended their armed activities indefinitely, ostensibly in response to several conciliatory moves initiated by the government. The decision was announced by Beebargh Baloch and Sirbaz Baloch, spokesmen for the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) and Balochistan Republican Army (BRA), while talking to journalists on satellite phones on Monday night. The PPP-led central and provincial governments have freed detained leaders and vowed to compensate for the injustice done to the people of the province in past six decades. The announcement was greeted in Islamabad as a good omen for PPP cochairperson and front-runner in the presidential race Asif Zardari ahead of September 6 election. He has spearheaded a vigorous initiative to launch a healing process in the province that is believed to be teetering towards separation. The government has accused foreign powers of instigating the insurgency. All the three militant organisations have jointly decided to suspend their resistance movement for an indefinite period, they said while denying that the decision was the result of any deal. We want to tell the Baloch people and the world that we can stop the movement any time and can restart it when ever we decide to do so. The groups said they are halting sabotage and subversive operations unilaterally but would wait for governments next move. The groups include the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), Balochistan Liberation Front (BLF) and the Balochistan Republican Army (BRA). They announced the truce in consultation with each other. Aaj TV channel quoted BLA spokesman Sarbaz Baloch as saying that the group had suspended its activities for the sake of Baloch people. He denied the suspension was a result of any deal with the government. He, however, warned of retaliation if security forces did not stop the use of force against the group. He demanded the government to stop establishing cantonments and launching new rojects in the province. A low key near-insurgency has been continuing for past some years led mainly by Baloch nationalist youth. They have largely targeted gas and electricity transmission lines and security forces. They have been demanding Baloch ownership on the natural resources of the province and stopping construction of new cantonments.On occasions they have also demanded independence for Balochistan. They said the organisations were united for the common objective. The spokesmen said that during the suspension of the movement the three organisations would review the overall situation in the province and if the military operation and construction of cantonments were not stopped they would respond with full force. They warned that anyone found involved in spying against the Baloch movement would be eliminated. Adviser on Interior Rehman Malik said last week the government was in touch with Guzzan Baloch, militant son of Baloch nationalist leader Khair Bakhsh Marri who is believed to have been leading the separatist armed struggle from abroad. He has been assured of safe return without arrest, he said. |
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India-Pakistan | |||||
Bugti used black money to build his own empire | |||||
2006-09-05 | |||||
ISLAMABAD Information Minister Mohammad Ali Durrani has justified the killing of Nawab Akbar Bugti and said that the Baloch leader had chosen the road of militancy by closing all political options. His extremist views were disowned even by his own Bugti tribe who isolated him and forced him to go to Kohlu where he eventually met his fate, Durrani told reporters here.
He said that Akbar Bugti had stopped travelling to Islamabad when former prime minister Nawaz Sharif was in power. In 1996, former interior minister Naseerullah Khan Babar had also conducted an operation in Dera Bugti and Sui. The minister also issued a 13-page fact-sheet, "Atrocities against humanity in Balochistan". "Having strong feudal background and oppressive domination, a few tribal chieftains Akbar Khan Bugti, Khair Bakhsh Marri and Attaullah Mengal are the most prominent of these having terrorist outlook," it said. It contains a long list of, what it called, "Terrorist activities of Akbar Bugti and his associates". It said that Akbar Bugti by utilising the money collected through illegal means (corruption, blackmailing, narcotics trade and arms smuggling) created his own empire. He organised his own mafia of terrorists to coerce local civilians. He maintained a private jail where he detained opponents and poor people illegally, for terms varying between five and 25 years. The average strength of prisoners in his jail used to be 150 to 200. He had his own court in Dera Bugti where he was the self-appointed judge. Since 1992, the fact-sheet said, 60 people were murdered by Akbar Bugti and his terrorists. It said that countless incidents of sabotage had been committed by Akbar Bugti and his terrorists.
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India-Pakistan | |
Nawab Marri, sons sentenced to 20 years in jail | |
2006-05-19 | |
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India-Pakistan | ||
Khair Bakhsh Marri 'arrested, released' | ||
2006-03-15 | ||
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India-Pakistan | |||
ANP will support Baloch nationalists: Wali | |||
2005-12-28 | |||
The Awami National Party will support Baloch nationalists in all democratic forums, Asfandyar Wali, the president of the ANP, has said. Talking to reporters, the ANP president said that provincial autonomy would solve all problems in the country.
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
Baloch nationalists up in arms again after 30 years |
2005-01-17 |
Backgrounder from September 2004. EFL.![]() For those who have seen the actors in this bloody confrontation take form, this ragtag group of rebellious nationalists may take a lot more force to dissipate then the ideologues from the mid-1970s required. The key to the events currently unfolding in BalochistanâŠperhaps lies in the early days of 2003, a year that will go down in Baloch political history as the year of mergers and coalitions between nationalist groups. By September, four Baloch parties had fallen together in an alliance called the Baloch Ithehad. Its two-point agenda, unsurprisingly, was exactly the same as the one professed by the armed rebels: opposition to military garrisons and Mega-projects in the province. Within a year, it became an active and violently articulated agenda in the province. As such, the Ittehad's significance as the de facto political front for armed struggle cannot be exaggerated. Even more significant is the less visible face of BLA, scattered all across the province in the shape of training camps and infrastructure. Evidence of these camps first came to public light in the last week of July 2004, when a group of Sindhi and Baloch journalists visited Kahan, the native town of Balochistan's former strongman Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri, in Kohlu district. The journalists found these camps manned by "mostly Marri tribesmen," equipped with wireless sets, walkie-talkies and satellite phones. Each camp had one or more electric generators as well as fleets of motorbikes and four wheel drive trucks. Their hosts claimed that there were 60 such camps in the Kohlu area alone.âŠOfficial sources in Quetta confirmed to the Herald that more than 150 camps, housing between 3000 to 5000 armed rebels, have been operating in different parts of Balochistan over the last two years. The camps are scattered wide across the province, from Kohlu and Sibi in the northeast to Kech and Gwadar in the southwest and from Khuzdar and Kalat in eastern and central Balochistan to Kharan and Chaghi in the northwest. The BLA's geographical spread is matched only by the diversity of its weapons: assault rifles, rocket-propelled grenades (RPG's) mortars and even anti-aircraft guns. Some residents of Makran's Dasht area who have relatives among the BLA camps in Makran told the Herald in Turbat that BLA members were paid monthly salaries ranging from 5,000 to 15,000 rupees. They added that a majority of BLA members in the Makran camps are educated Baloch youth having past or present links with the nationalist Baloch Students Organization. In addition, both government sources in Quetta and people from Dasht confirm that the rebels are led by the Marri and Mengal activists who had constituted the younger lot of the 1970s resistance and are now in their early or mid-fifties. As for the source of their money, America tops the list of speculation, with a senior government official in Quetta pointing out that the US may want to put a damper on the growing Chinese presence in Balochistan. Some influential business groups in Dubai and Qatar are also said to be piqued over what they perceive as potentially adverse effects of the Gwadar port on business opportunities in the Gulf. The intelligence community in Islamabad believes Iran is another possible opponent of the Gwadar port because this project would compete with Iran's newly built Chahbahar Port on the Balochistan coast. India, of course, is an old time rival and would like to get even with Pakistan over Kashmir. But observers warn the Pakistani establishment against reading too much into this aspect of the conflict. "Much of what is happening in Balochistan today has a strong internal dimension that connects with its recent history and it will be a folly to ignore it any longer," says one analyst. On the policy front, BLA's inception can be linked to Islamabad's attempts to explore oil and gas in Kohlu between 1999 and 2000. Armed Marri tribesmen led by Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri, resisted this attempt. Islamabad retaliated by recruiting a 1000-strong levies force of the rival Bijarani tribe in Kohlu to contain Nawab Marri's influence... During this period, pressure from the so-called Bijarani Militia gradually pushed the Marri tribesmen underground, creating conditions for a militant backlash. This underground network soon proliferated to central Balochistan where Sardar Attaullah Mengal threw in his lot with Marri, his comrade-in-arms since the insurgency of the mid-1970s⊠The Bugti tribe was drawn into the conflict after a two-year lull in militant activity during 2001 and 2002 due to development in Afghanistan. The repeated bombing and rocketing of the gas pipelines in the Sui area in late 2002 and early 2003 worked as a catalystâŠ. By mid-2003, the scattered forces of another Baloch nationalist leader from the 1970s, the late Mir Ghaus Bux Bizenjo, were also closing ranks. The non-tribal, essentially middle-class groups such as the Balochistan National Democratic Party (BNDP), headed by Hasil Bizenjo and Sardar Sanaullah Zehri, and the main faction of the Balochistan National Movement (BNM) led by Dr Abdul Hayee Baloch announced a merger in October 2003 and re-christened the new party as the National Party (NP). The merger came a month after the four main Nationalist forces, namely BNP, JWP, Nawab Khair Baksh Marri and the elements that have now formed the NP, joined the Baloch Ittehad. So where are things headed? A more sensible way to the future could be a serious effort on the part of Islamabad to lay the foundations of a truly participatory system of government in which provincial concerns are addressed in a constitutional framework. This has only a remote chance of happening, though. "It will be overoptimistic to expect the establishment to resolve the national and democratic question", says senior NP leader Dr Abdul Malik. Another way, and one that the ISI probably cannot resist, is to infiltrate the militant ranks anew, engineer greater "collateral damage" to discredit the struggle and effect a division in their ranks as it did by infiltrating the BSO ranks in the late 1970s and early 1980s. On the political front, Islamabad has already launched efforts to draw Bugti into talks while instituting criminal cases against Marri and Mengal leaders. This strategy can ensure "friendly" government in Quetta, as it did during the past 30 years. But the fact remains that instead of the bringing the Baloch people forward of the path of progress and development, it has taken them full circle back to the dark ages of 1973. The future of this strategy cannot be any different. "The establishment can play its game as long as it likes, but it can never score a point in what is essentially a zero-sum game", concludes BNP leader Habib Jalib Baloch. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia | ||
Nawab Marri, 3 sons sentenced to three-year jail | ||
2004-11-21 | ||
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
Baloch's getting riled up |
2004-09-19 |
EFL Hundreds of Marri Baloch tribesmen, armed to the teeth, took up position on the Kohlu mountains, one of Pakistan's most backward, but oil and gas rich areas, to challenge the government's policies in Balochistan. The tribesmen, who call themselves "guerillas" waging a war for the rights of the Baloch population, were armed with Russian Kalashnikovs, heavy machine and anti-aircraft guns and RPGs, picked up in Afghanistan during their 14 years in self-exile. Most of them are educated with military/guerilla training received in Afghanistan. Their chieftain, Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri, who was in self-exile, called his tribesmen to leave their homes and join him in Afghanistan in 1980. More than 12,000 Marris responded to their leader's call and left Pakistan to settle in the Afghan provinces of Kandahar and Helmand. Note, the Baluch's don't follow an Islamist ideology, but instead have leftist and tribal motives. Remember Afghanistan was ruled by the Communists during the eighties. Until the eighties, Baluchistan and the NWFP had a significant presence from leftists, which was a primary motivator for the Saudis and Pakistanis to support radical madrassas in those provinces. Similar to the way the Muslim Brotherhood was supported by the Gulf states to undermine the radical pro-Soviet Arab states like Nasser's Egypt and Assad's Syria. According to political analysts, Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri, who believes that the Baloch cannot get their political and economic rights without an armed struggle, called his tribesmen to Afghanistan to train them in guerilla warfare. The Marri guerillas are currently lead by Nawabzada Balach Marri, the son of the ailing Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri. Balach, an electronics engineer from Moscow, won the provincial assembly seat from Kohlu with record votes of over 18,000 - the highest ever cast in the constituency - despite all efforts by the administration to support his rival candidate, Mir Mohabat Khan Marri, the then provincial caretaker minister. After a sudden increase in the Marri tribes militant's actions in 2000, other militant groups also joined them to carry out joint actions across the province. Rockets attacks on F.C. posts, landmine and dynamite explosions against F.C. personnel were witnessed in the neighbouring Dera Bugti tribal agency. Similar attacks were also launched in Kalat, Dalbundeen, Khuzdar, Gwadar, and other areas by the militants in a show of strength. |
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