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ANALYSIS: Winning the Battle of Algiers PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 27 April 2010 07:36

Winning the Battle of Algiers

 

By: Mir Mohammad Ali Talpur

If brutal crackdowns and search operations of suspected areas had any success in deterring people from struggling for their national, political, social and economic rights, Algeria would still have been a French colony

 

Jeehamd Shahija Marri was a notorious cattle rustler in the Pat Feeder area in the 1950s and 60s; he used to narrate his exploits about the risks they had to take and the distances they had to walk. He would recount that after reaching a relatively safe place after a continuous quick walk of 10 to 12 hours, they would rest but be unable to sit as their knees refused to bend and they had to drop themselves on the ground and massage their muscles back to life.

 

It was in 1963 that a bulldozer constructing a road from Talli to Kahan was attacked and he was picked up as a suspect and severely tortured. He was hung from his hair — as the Marris sport long hair — but he resisted the torture and refused to wrongly admit to the alleged crime. On release he joined the Farrars (Rebels). He was above 70 years of age when the army action began in the Marri area in May 1973 and led guerrilla units surpassing the younger lot in endurance and tenacity. He was a role model for his bravery and toughness.

 

On February 27, 2005, when Musharraf ruled the roost, the New Kahan camp — where the Marris after their return from Afghanistan in 1992 had been settled — was raided by 1,500 policemen under the supervision of the Quetta DIG Pervez Rafi Bhatti. Many innocent people were arrested and claims of weapons recovery made, but to top it all off the Pakistani flag was hoisted on what the police termed as the ‘fort’ of Nawab Khair Baksh Marri, an easy alternative to Delhi’s ‘Lal Qilla’, which they have always yearned for. I do not know the exact numbers but after the raid many decided to throw in their lot with the Farrars. It was raided again in March 2006, then once more in November, each time adding recruits to the Farrars.

 

The meek and ineffective provincial governments by implication connive with the brutalities perpetrated against the Baloch population and the present incumbents have often openly admitted that the FC runs a ‘parallel government’. The law and order situation is bad in Karachi but one does not see the crackdowns, except in Lyari, that Balochistan suffers.

 

When in mid-June 2007 seven army men were killed in an ambush in Quetta, a search operation was carried out in which a lot of people were arrested from Qilli Qambarani, Qilli Ismail and other places. Hundreds of search operations have been carried out in Quetta and its environs and numerous other places in Balochistan but they have not improved the law and order situation by an iota.

 

These searches should not be thought of as ones where the rights of the suspects are read out and they are given the benefit of being ‘innocent until proven guilty’. These search operations are violent, brutish and rough in the extreme, aimed at intimidating and humiliating the people in order to deter them from supporting the struggle for rights, but this aim is never achieved.

 

The residents are presumed guilty and the ferocity and brutality of the execution of searches is inversely proportional to the resistance and resentment displayed by the people. Those, mostly the young, on whom the axe invariably falls, are manhandled if they resist and bundled into waiting vehicles and driven away to camps and prisons; needless to say without due process of law and without recourse to justice.

 

On April 20, a massive crackdown was carried out by the LEAs in Quetta and environs, Qilli Ismail, Kechi Baig, Qilli Qambarani, Sariab, Qilli Sarday and Wali Jat. All day long the homes belonging to the Baloch were searched, people taken into custody blindfolded and whisked away. Naturally the people resisted and there were scuffles and fights during which a lady, Shahnaz Bibi, mother of BNP activist Sanaullah Mengal, was killed. Women too are fair game for harsh treatment. Eyewitnesses say that around 300 people were taken into custody though the mainstream media reported only 100 arrests.

 

They were suspected of bomb blasts, kidnappings, target killings and other violent crimes that occur frequently in Quetta in spite of hundreds of search operations that have taken place in the past. Incidentally, the same Qilli Qambarani, Qilli Ismail and other places were searched after the killings of seven army men in June 2007 but apparently that crackdown failed to eliminate the suspected ‘troublemakers’. Each subsequent crackdown is more brutal than the last one.

 

If brutal crackdowns and search operations of suspected areas had any success in deterring people from struggling for their national, political, social and economic rights, then dear readers, Algeria would still have been a French colony because the French forces there were brutal, ruthless and unforgiving. They picked up people, kept them in custody and tortured them as long as they wanted but in the end they had to pack up and leave because neither the resistance nor the will of the people could be broken.

 

It is said that the French with ruthless disregard for Algerian lives won the Battle of Algiers by destroying the FLN there in 1957, but lost the War for Algeria when the people rose up as a whole in 1960, proving the futility of repression. During the February 29, 1980 people’s opposition to the Soviet forces in Kabul, I was stranded outside the city during the night but entered the city next morning, which is also an example. Eventually, repression makes the people fearless and compels them to utterly disregard their own safety.


Such crackdowns are counter-productive and carrying them out adds fuel to the fire. A suspect or two may be nabbed but when hundreds are antagonised in the process, the likes of Jeehamd Shahija, Dr Allah Nazar and others willingly join the Farrars. The term ‘Farrar’ may be seen with distaste by others but for a Baloch it conjures glorifying images and is the ultimate dream of many a Baloch youth.

I spent 20 years with the Marri tribe and have contacts with a cross-section of Baloch people from different tribes and areas and can say with authority that this senseless brutality cannot and will not be able to break the will and resilience of the Baloch people. The Battle for Algiers may have been won but more and more Baloch, both old and young, as a result of repression will join up with the Farrars or work clandestinely to help them succeed.

Mir Mohammad Ali Talpur has an association with the Baloch rights movement going back to the early 1970s. He can be contacted at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

With Thanks Balochjohd.com

Last Updated on Thursday, 29 April 2010 13:47
 
PAKISTAN: The High Court is unable to recover a man from illegal military detention after 15 months PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 27 April 2010 07:26

ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION

PAKISTAN: The High Court is unable to recover a man from illegal military detention after 15 months


According to reports from the victim’s father and a variety of NGOs working to recover missing persons, Mr. Jalil Ahmed Reki Baloch, 35 (details below), was abducted by persons in plain clothes on 13 February 2009 during the day. Eye witnesses report that 12 to 15 people emerged from a group of vehicles and pulled Jailil Reki into a pickup truck while he was walking home from Friday prayers, near a girls' school at Chowk Kechi on Saryab Road in Quetta. The vehicles included two jeeps and two pickups with tinted windows and no registration plates.

The following day police did not allow Jalil's father Mr. Abdul Qadeer Reki Baloch to file a First Information Report (FIR) at the nearby Shalkot police station in Saryab. The complaint was only recorded in the Roznamcha (the daily diary). Mr. Qadeer instead had to file a habeas corpus petition at the Balochistan High Court in Quetta (16 February, 2009, Constitutional Petition No.CP76/2009).

On 22 February we are told that an independent delegation met with the Chief Minister of Balochistan province, Mr. Nawab Aslam Raisani. The group, which included the chairperson of Defence of Human Rights Pakistan Mrs. Amina Masood Janjua, the president of Voice for Baloch Missing Persons Mr. Nasrullah Bangulzai Baloch and human rights activist Mr. Muhammad Zafar, was told that Jalil was in the custody of the Inter-Services Intelligence Agency (ISI). The chief minister said that some weeks earlier the head of the ISI's Quetta division had asked him to support the filing of an FIR against Jalil Reki and another man, Dr. Bashir Azeem for burning Pakistan's flag and chanting anti-government slogans. The minister said that since he refused the ISI took the men into its custody. Dr. Bashir Azeem is also missing.

The team submitted their statements on the meeting as affidavits to the Supreme Court and the Balochistan High Court in Quetta, to the chairperson of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) Ms. Asma Jehangir and to the members of a Joint Investigation Team (JIT) that was set up by the provincial government to look into missing persons. The team consists of members of the ISI, Military Intelligence (MI), the Federal Investigation Unit (FIU) and Central Investigation Agency (CIA) in Balochistan province, along with the Inspector General of Police (IG) in Balochistan and the District Police Officer (DPO) of Quetta district. The affidavits can be read here: affidavit-1, affidavit-2, and affidavit-3.

During its regular hearing of missing persons cases in January 2010 the Supreme Court made a sweeping order for all police stations to file FIRs as requested in such cases, as is legally mandated. After a few more attempts, Jalil's father successfully lodged an FIR on 14 February 2010, exactly a year after his son’s abduction. The High Court of Balochistan had not acted on the constitutional petition from until the FIR was submitted in court. However subsequently during the hearing in April, the High Court judge ordered the attorney general of the province to submit his comments on whether the ISI and FC provincial chiefs should appear in court. The next hearing is fixed for June 2010.

The FIR holds two persons responsible for Jalil's abduction: Major General Saleem Nawaz, Director General of the Frontier Corp (FC) in Balochistan and Brigadier Saad Khattak, the then-head of the ISI in the province.

The director of operations at the Federal Ministry of Interior also wrote to the National Crisis Management Cell in Islamabad, on 22 March 2010 calling for the inclusion of Jalil's name in official list of missing persons, as seen here.

Persons who have been abducted by the ISI have reported severe torture and various other human rights violations during periods of incommunicado detention, often while being forced to confess to anti-state activities. There are strong concerns that the life and safety of Jalil and Dr. Bashir are at risk; they are certainly not being held according to standards set by Pakistan's criminal procedural code or constitution, and are being denied the right to a fair trial as due them under international law.

In a recently similar case, AHRC-UAC-036-2010 Mr. Murad Khan Marri disappeared for nine months after his arrest and abduction by plain clothed intelligence agents; he has been charged with crimes related to anti state activities and appears to have been extremely badly treated.

Read more...

 

Last Updated on Thursday, 29 April 2010 13:51
 
Baloch Missings... PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Sunday, 25 April 2010 02:58
Last Updated on Sunday, 25 April 2010 03:02
 
Baloch movement supports complete equality for women. B.S.O. Azaad PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 24 April 2010 14:49

Baloch movement supports complete equality for women. B.S.O. Azaad

Central spokesperson of Baloch Student Organization Azaad regarded the incident which took place in Paddak, a place between Noshki and Dalbandin, where Pakistan army personals took Baloch women off their cars, humiliated them and kept them in Pakistan army’s camp, as a part of the series of unethical acts committed by Pakistan to disgrace women, the series also includes the acidizing of Baloch girls in Dalbandin said the central spokesperson. Spokesperson further revealed that Pakistan army has been harassing Baloch women in Chagi and adjoining areas from a long period (Chagi is the area where Pakistan exploded its nuclear weapons and people there are not only humiliated by Pakistan army but they also are facing serious diseases caused by the radiations of the nuclear explosion). Spokesperson further elaborated that Baloch movement is based on humanitarian and secular foundations and it supports complete equality for women in the society therefore Pakistan is trying to defame Baloch cause through creating groups to disgrace Baloch women and to push Baloch women back into their homes so that they stop supporting the Baloch movement. Spokesperson appealed to Baloch youth to understand the sensitivity of the situation and counter the negative tactics of the occupiers in order to build a strong nation where everyone is equal.

Last Updated on Saturday, 24 April 2010 14:55
 
Operation in Quetta, Martyrdom of a Baloch “mother” and arrest of hundreds of Baloch would strengthen freedom’s movement. B.S.O. Azaad PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Wednesday, 21 April 2010 09:27

Operation in Quetta, Martyrdom of a Baloch “mother” and arrest of hundreds of Baloch would strengthen freedom’s movement. B.S.O. Azaad

Baloch Student Organization Azaad’s central spokesperson regarded the attack of Pakistan’s forces in Saryab and its surrounding areas, disdaining Baloch norms and values, Martyrdom of a Baloch mother and arrest of hundreds of Baloch elders and youth, as colonial ferocity, and said that such approaches and violence strengthen national movements rather than weakening them, and the assault on the Balochs in Saryab and its adjoining areas would intensify Baloch nations movement for liberation.

Meanwhile in a Seminar organized by Baloch Student Organization Azaad in Baghbana (Khuzdar), Central Secretary-General Zahid Baloch, Member of Central Committee Ali Ahmed Baloch, Baloch National Movement’s Central representative Khuda Baksh Baloch, Aijaz Baloch and Zulfiqar Baloch of Baghbana Zone said that Baloch would not accept the Independence which would be given in charity by International Imperialists rather we are struggling for our national independence with the support of our own masses and their power and Baloch history would never forgive the people, organizations and so called political parties who are consciously hindering the struggle for Independence. Speakers said that Balochistan was an sovereign state before 1948 which was later occupied, the people who regard Baloch movement as a separatist movement are the actual paid agents of Imperialists and are traitors for Baloch nation, and these are the same elements who are trying to astray Baloch nation with the slogans of the revival of constitutions and democracy (in Pakistan) and slogans against Sardari system, in reality these elements are the same elements who are working to strengthen Sardari system and tribalism and are also supporting the occupiers to exploit Baloch resources and in kidnapping of pro Independence Baloch youth. The speakers further said that the international state of affairs do not become favorable for any nation by itself instead nations have to search for international allies and empathizers by themselves, the conditions today demand’s Baloch nation to stand with an ideology shoulder to shoulder in order to safeguard their National Identity, National Independence and against the exploitation of their national resources. In order to counter the plans of imperialists and opportunists and in order to attain the Independence of Baloch motherland Baloch youth should abandon comforts and eases and should practically work for the national movement.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 21 April 2010 09:31
 
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