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government’s questionable policies in Balochistan to control
insurgency have caused deep anger and unrest in the province.
Thousands of people have allegedly been picked up by intelligence
agencies and held in custody for months, if not years, without
being produced in a court of law.
The
mother of Gohram Saleh Baloch has threatened to renounce her
Pakistani citizenship. Her son has been missing for over two
years now, and has still not been produced in a court of law.
Gohram
Saleh was with his brother, Ibrahim Saleh, when they were allegedly
picked up by intelligence agencies. It was August 2004, and
Gohram was enroute to Gwadar seeking a job. According to reports,
the brothers were grabbed in Balochistan’s Kech district.
Different versions of the story have been circulated in the
media, but one version maintains that while Ibrahim was released
in Karachi, Gohram remained in custody.
In a petition filed for the recovery of Gohram Saleh
in the Balochistan High Court, it was alleged that Gohram was
picked up by intelligence personnel from Talar, an area between
Kech and Gwadar districts. During the petition hearing, intelligence
and law enforcing agencies, testified under oath before the
court that Gohram was not in their custody. But during the hearing
of other petitions, the court discovered that the Balochistan
home department had ordered the release of Gohram Saleh after
he had been declared innocent by the Joint Investigation Team
(JIT), comprising three intelligence agencies.
It was the testimony of one of the government’s
own jailers that proved the official story false. On oath, before
a bench headed by Justice Raja Fayyaz Ahmed, the then Chief
Justice of the Balochistan High Court, the assistant superintendent
of the Anti-Terrorist Force (ATF), sub-jail in Quetta cantonment,
said that he released Gohram Saleh after receiving orders from
the home department.
But Gohram’s freedom didn’t last long. As
soon as Gohram Saleh stepped out from the ATF sub-jail –
the Baloch Bar Association has branded the prison the Guantanamo
Bay and Abu Gharaib of Balochistan – he was taken into
custody by two personnel of an all-powerful intelligence agency.
Though the court ordered the concerned quarters to produce Gohram
Saleh Baloch, the agency had flatly denied custody of Gohram
Saleh, despite the disclosure made by the assistant superintendent
of the ATF prison.
Unfortunately, Gohram Saleh’s situation is not
unique. A large number of people, mostly political activists
and Marri and Bugti tribesmen, have gone missing in Balochistan.
The disappearances started in 2000, in the aftermath of the
acts of sabotage that erupted in the province. The root cause
of the unrest can be linked to the assassination of Muhammad
Nawaz Marri, a judge of the Balochistan High Court in early
2000. Much speculation about government involvement clouded
the high-profile murder. Not only was Nawaz Marri being escorted
by police, but he was killed in an area of the city where security
is tight. The government, however, blamed Nawab Khair Bakhsh
Marri, a Baloch nationalist leader, for the judge’s death.
But Baloch nationalist forces described the killing as a government
conspiracy to pit Marri tribesmen against each other in order
to pave the way for government access to Kohlu’s huge
reservoirs of oil and gas. Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri has always
maintained that until and unless Baloch ownership of the province’s
natural resources is accepted, he would not allow anyone to
come in and exploit resources in Kohlu and other parts of Balochistan.
Soon after the killing, Nawab Khair Baksh was arrested
on charges of murdering the judge and eventually released on
bail. A few months after his arrest, bomb blasts targeting government
installations and security forces started across the province.
In retaliation, the government indulged in a spate of unconstitutional
and illegal arrests, as well as full-scale military operations
in the province, including the still ongoing conflicts in Kohlu
and Dera Bugti.
Nationalist forces claim that the number of illegal
arrests are in the thousands. Some of the missing disappeared
more than four years ago. BNP (Mengal) has prepared a list of
many of the missing persons, and handed it over to national
and international human rights organisations. Under the law,
anyone arrested and accused of a crime must be produced before
a judicial magistrate within 24 hours of arrest. Amazingly,
none of those missing have been produced before any court and
moreover, no challans have been submitted against any of them
in any court within the stipulated 14 days. As a result, scores
of applications regarding the arrested and missing are pending
in the Balochistan High Court. But little progress has been
made. The legal requests have been given no importance and intelligence
agencies continue to deny custody of the missing, despite strong
evidence to the contrary.
Part of the mounting testimony against the government
comes from those who have come forward and alleged that they
were captured and subsequently released. They recount tales
of interrogation and torture while in the hands of intelligence
agencies. But again, during court hearings, the concerned agencies
denied their custody.
Stories of illegal arrests are endless. Dr. Hanif Sharif
is an intellectual who was picked up by intelligence officers
from Turbat. After a petition for his release to the Balochistan
High Court proved useless – with the usual official denials
by the counsels representing the Balochistan and Federal governments
– Dr. Sharif’s father and mother staged hunger strikes
in front of the Karachi Press Club. Eventually, Dr. Sharif was
released.
Samiullah Baloch, the younger brother of Senator Sana
Baloch, the central Secretary Information of BNP (Mengal), was
allegedly picked up from a military police check post in Quetta
cantonment. He was travelling home with his elder brother Abdullah
Baloch, when their vehicle was chased by armed, plain-clothes
intelligence personnel. When they reached the police check post,
they believed they would receive refuge there. Abdullah was
left alone. But Samiullah was taken into custody. Abdullah speculates
that being a US green card holder might have saved him. Nonetheless,
he is horrified that despite his claims that his brother was
picked up by intelligence personnel right before his eyes, all
concerned agencies have refused, in court, of having custody
of his brother. Samiullah Baloch was picked up in June 2006
and his whereabouts are still unknown.
Within nationalist political circles, it is alleged that
the main objective behind the hundreds, if not thousands, of
illegal arrests of political activists and relatives of political
leaders, is to pressurise them into changing loyalties.
Another case resulted in the longest-ever hunger strike
in world history. The case of Ali Asghar Bangulzai. MMA leader,
Hafiz Hussain Ahmed, disclosed during a chat with journalists
that when he approached a senior officer of an intelligence
agency about Ali Asghar Bangulzai, the officer admitted that
Ali Asghar was in their custody. But later they denied custody
or any knowledge of his whereabouts. His whereabouts are still
unknown and his children staged a hunger strike that continued
for nine months. The hunger strike attracted international press
coverage and embarrassed the government, leading the governor
of Balochistan to personally intervene and approach the District
Nazim of Mastung to end the children’s hunger strike.
Other hunger strikes have forced a positive response
from the government. Dr. Allah Nazar Baloch, Dr. Imdad Baloch,
the former chairman of the Baloch Students Organisation (BSO)
and five other of their colleagues were amongst the fortunate
who were released. They alleged that while in custody, they
were subjected to the worst kind of torture. “After they
failed to get the expected answer, I was ordered to lie down
on the floor. Then they continuously hit me with a leather paddle
for four or five minutes. It was so painful that I could not
move,” said Doctor Nasim Baloch, who was arrested with
Doctor Imdad and Doctor Allah Nazar Baloch from Karachi’s
Gulshan Iqbal. “They kept me in solitary confinement for
a long time. I had to urinate in a bottle and empty it once
in a day, when I went for defecation. Defecation was a torture
itself, as a man would stand nearby and shout: ‘Hurry
up, you only have 40 seconds.’ Then he would shout. ‘Hurry
up, your time is almost finished...’ Often, one had to
come out without washing up,”Doctor Naseem said, adding,
“I was abused, humiliated, and was helpless. I could not
even express my anger. I would only occasionally see the face
of the soldiers who served us our meals, or who took us to the
toilet.” He alleged that the persons who were interrogating
him threatened, “If I failed to cooperate and refused
to accept responsibility for the bomb blasts, I would be killed
in a false police encounter.”
Jumand Khan Marri, who was illegally arrested in mid-2006 from
a local hospital, told a press conference after his release,
“They gave me electric shocks and did not allow me to
sleep for a week.” He alleged that “Many Baloch
were there and during the night there were terrible cries of
pain coming from different torture cells.”
Jan Muhammad Buledi, a member of Balochistan Assembly, told
a recent session of the Assembly, that Abdul Sattar Baloch,
a school teacher, was arrested a few months ago from Turbat.
He was severely tortured. “When Sattar Baloch was released
a few weeks back, he was paralysed and was unable to walk,”
claims Buledi.
Despite protests, illegal arrests have continued in Balochistan.
Relatives of missing persons are neither getting relief from
the government, nor from the courts that are meant to protect
them. As a result, a deep and dangerous anger is growing among
the Baloch. “The situation in Balochistan is serious.
Intelligence agencies have no option but to pick up suspected
people in order to get information and to check terrorism in
the province,” said a police officer on condition of anonymity.
Condemning the alleged massive arrests, the leader of the opposition
in the Balochistan Assembly, Kachkol Ali Advocate, said that
the government and its agencies have no respect for the rights
of the people of Balochistan. “The government is talking
about the establishment of the writ of law in Balochistan. But
when the government and its agencies do not have any respect
for the law, then how they can expect people to follow the writ
of law,” he said, adding that unless the hundreds of missing
people are given justice, the situation would deteriorate dangerously
in Balochistan.
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