|
The
town of Dera Bugti, deserted by almost its entire population, has
turned into a war zone as Bugti tribesmen and paramilitary forces
perched atop the mountains and buildings, trade rockets, shells
and gunfire. The town has been divided between the two sides as
if by a border.
Both
sides had been observing a complete ceasefire since an armistice
in April, brokered by PML leaders Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain and Senator
Mushahid Hussain Syed. Under the armistice, they vacated their positions
from roadside bunkers and mountain tops and allowed the Dera Bugti-Sui
road, which had remained closed for 20 days, to open.
After
initiating the military operation in neighbouring Kohlu district
in the wake of a rocket attack on President General Pervez Musharraf
in December, the paramilitary forces re-occupied their positions
and took up all strategic positions on the main Dera Bugti-Sui road.
The
conflict formally broke out between the two sides after the forces
initiated firing on the position of Bugti tribesmen on December
30, followed by clashes, shelling, gunfire and landmine explosions
that claimed over 50 lives and injured nearly a hundred.
The
Jamhoori Watan Party put the figures at 72 tribesmen killed and
228 injured in a month of bombings and rocket-fire. It also claimed
that while two or three fighters may have been killed, the rest
were innocent civilians, mostly women and children.
Paramilitary forces say that they have lost five of their
personnel while around 12 were injured, but allege that the figures
quoted by the opposite side are exaggerated.
"The
Frontier Corps hide casualties on their side as they fear this will
demoralise their men," said Agha Shahid Bugti, a spokesman
for the Bugti tribe.
Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti survived the bombing and shelling carried
out by paramilitary forces on his residence and moved to the mountains,
leaving dozens of his armed tribesmen behind to protect his stronghold.
He also directed his tribesmen to spread out in the area and engage
in guerrilla warfare with the paramilitary forces.
Water
pipes, power supply and telephone lines were badly damaged in the
town of Dera Bugti during the intense shelling from both sides,
and a dozen shops were reduced to ashes after catching fire due
to shelling. Over 90 per cent of the population (25,000) of the
town, including an estimated 300 Hindu families, had to migrate
to rural areas or neighbouring Sindh and adjoining districts. The
people living in the outskirts of the town are also migrating in
fear of severe clashes.
Over
a dozen Frontier Corps personnel and six civilians were killed while
around 20 others were seriously injured in landmine accidents. The
government blamed Bugti tribesmen loyal to Nawab Akbar Bugti for
land-mining the area while the latter accused the paramilitary forces
of doing the same in order to secure the area from the armed tribesmen.
Acts
of sabotage aimed at disrupting daily life in Balochistan also increased
across the province. These include bomb blasts close to public properties,
rocket attacks on paramilitary forces, landmine explosions and blowing
up gas, power and water supply lines, rail tracks and road bridges.
The Baloch Liberation Army, hitherto an underground organisation,
claims responsibility for these actions, to protest against military
operations.
Three artillery men of the Pakistan army were killed and four others
injured when Marri tribesmen fired a rocket at forces in the Marwar
coal-mine area. The paramilitary forces, along with regular troops,
conducted an operation to drive away hundreds of armed Marri tribesmen
in the Marwar and Margut coal-mine area, some 60 kilometres south
of Quetta. These tribesmen were encamped in the area and had begun
extorting money from the coal miners last year to raise funds for
Baloch resistance groups.
Jets
and gunship helicopters continued to bomb Kohlu regularly for three
weeks, but the raids later tapered down to once a week. Paramilitary
forces officials declare that nine of the Farrari (rebel) camps
have been destroyed in the Marri-Kohlu area while the military forces
are engaged in attempting to wipe out the rest.
While Marri and Bugti tribesmen deny the existence of training camps
in their areas the government claims that there are 29 such camps,
and two were destroyed by the military.
After the military action, the government also started executing
its long-awaited plan to explore oil and gas reserves in Kohlu and
Dera Bugti. The construction work for a military cantonment at Sui
has started and is in full swing, while the process of construction
of a similar military establishment has been initiated in the Kohlu-Marri
area. The government has already announced the construction of three
military cantonments in the natural resource-rich regions of Kohlu,
Sui (Dera Bugti) and Gwader.
Paramilitary forces are accused of the cold-blooded murder of 12
innocent Bugti tribesmen in Pathar Nulla of Pir Koh area as revenge
for the deaths of three of their personnel killed in a landmine
explosion on Eid Day. After the landmine incident, the paramilitary
forces rounded up twelve tribesmen from the nearby villages, tied
their hands and blindfolded them. Later, they were all lined up
before a firing-squad and gunned down. Paramilitary forces claim
that these tribesmen were killed in an armed clash, but fail to
provide any proof that such a clash ever took place.
"It is not possible for 12 people of one side to be killed
in a shootout while not even a single person is injured on the other
side. It is purely a custodial murder by Frontier Corps personnel
and world human rights bodies should take notice of this atrocity,"
said Agha Shahid Bugti in a press conference.
An HRCP delegation, headed by Chairperson Asma Jahangir, visited
Kohlu and Dera Bugti and found gross human rights violations. In
its report, HRCP declared that a military operation is indeed being
conducted and it has resulted in civilian casualties. It also appealed
to both Baloch tribesmen and the government to declare a ceasefire
immediately and initiate a process of dialogue leading to a political
settlement.
In a provocative move, the army occupied Bugti House at Sui, claiming
that it was PPL property. The Bugti clan, on the other hand, claim
that they have all the relevant documents. They allege that the
government took action only because the HRCP delegation stayed at
Bugti House.
"PPL only owns the land within the fenced area where its installations
are situated. Besides that, not a single inch belongs to it in all
of Dera Bugti district. The Army has already occupied the whole
country and can take over Bugti houses in Quetta, Karachi and others
parts of the province without any hindrance," Agha Shahid Bugti
said.
The nationalist elements and the three Sardars - Nawab Akbar Khan
Bugti, Khair Buksh Marri and Attaullah Mengal - whom General Pervez
Musharraf terms miscreants, are also firm in their faith that the
armed struggle will gain momentum with the passage of the time.
They are hopeful that the struggle for rights and control over their
resources will gather popularity and the government will capitulate.
"The struggle of the Baloch population is gaining momentum
and this is evident from the bomb blasts and rocket attacks in other
parts of the province like Makran, Kalat, Khuzdar, Hub, Naushki,
Kharan, Bolan, Barkahn," said Nawab Akbar Bugti.
There is serious concern among the people of Balochistan, many of
whom sympathise with Baloch nationalists, over the prevailing situation.
If the military action is prolonged much further, there are chances
that the armed resistance will gain popular support.
|