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Bomb
blasts targeting Chinese engineers in Gwadar on May 4, policemen
in Quetta on May 24, and rocket attacks on Gwadar airport and on
Mund, have injured 15 people and claimed five lives over the past
month, including those of three Chinese nationals. The attacks shook
the country as the main target has been the country's future economic
nerve - the Gwadar port. The Chinese citizens were employed by a
Chinese construction company building the country's third port and
Balochistan's first deep-water port in the coastal town of Gwadar.
The project, with an estimated cost of 248 million dollars, is due
for completion in June 2005 and work on the first phase of the project
commenced in 2002.
As
the injured parties later told police, 12 Chinese, their Pakistani
driver and a police guard, were en-route to the project site from
their camp. As soon as their Mercedez van slowed down to cross a
speed-breaker on the fish harbour road, a powerful blast occurred,
killing three engineers instantly. Police believe that explosives
planted in a white-coloured Suzuki Mehran car parked near the speed-breaker
were detonated by remote control. Four of the injured, including
the police guard, were shifted to Karachi for better medical aid.
After
the incident, the Balochistan Governor rushed to Gwadar alongwith
Chief Minister Jam Mir Mohammad Yousaf, to review the security situation
on the directives of the federal government. The IG police remained
encamped in the area for a week to personally ensure the security
of the Chinese nationals working on the deep-sea project. Security
was beefed-up between their camp and workplace as well as within
their residential compound and project site by deploying hundreds
of men. Police forces were called in from other coastal towns such
as Jeevani and Pasni, to prevent saboteurs from making such attempts
in the future.
Initially
18 suspects, including nine Marri tribesmen who run scrap businesses
in Gwadar, were arrested. According to police, four of the suspects
were allowed to leave after preliminary investigations while the
rest were detained. The government subsequently assigned senior
police officials from both Balochistan and Sindh the task of tracking
down the culprits.
Even
before the federal and Balochistan governments had time to recover
from the terrorist attack, Gwadar airport was attacked by rockets
at midnight on May 21. The attacks caused no damage as all the rockets
missed the airport building. However, an oil-tanker driver sustained
bullet injuries when, according to police personnel, Airport Security
Forces opened fire in all directions to respond to the terrorists.
The Gwadar attack was followed on May 24 by a bomb blast in Quetta
which injured 15 policemen. On a routine patrol on the outskirts
of the provincial capital, the policemen were riding in a truck
which slowed down to cross a speed-breaker when a bomb, planted
in an abandoned bicycle, went off.
Again,
a week later, on the night between May 30 and 31, the saboteurs
fired over two-dozen rockets on Mund, resulting in the death of
a 14-year-old boy and his father, and injuring four others, including
two women of the same family. Mund, the home-town of Education Minister,
Zubaida Jalal, is approximately 850 kilometres south-west of Quetta.
According to officials, the intended target, the Frontier Corps
camp, remained unscathed as most of the rockets landed in and around
the camp's open grounds, causing no damage. However, the buildings
of a school and tehsil office were partially damaged. One of the
rockets landed on a house, piercing its roof before it exploded,
killing one person on the spot, and injuring five others, one of
whom succumbed to his injuries in the hospital.
Rocket attacks and bomb blasts have been a regular feature
in the provincial capital, particularly its cantonment areas, Kohlu
and Sui town, for the last four years, and have claimed over 25
lives. Police have recovered big caches of arms and ammunition,
including rockets, but have failed to arrest any of the culprits
involved.
Initially, the investigating agencies and police did not
rule out the involvement of Islamic fundamentalists in the attacks
against the Chinese engineers. However, those in political circles
are doubtful that terrorist arracks would be carried out by extremist
groups against a project which could threaten US interests in the
region. Chief Minister, Jam Mir Mohammad Yousaf, has also rejected
the possibility of the involvement of Al-Qaeda or other fundamentalist
groups in the terrorist attacks on the Chinese engineers, declaring
that some local elements may be involved instead.
The government and its agencies believe Baloch nationalist
groups opposed to the mega-development projects and the construction
of cantonments in Balochistan may be responsible. "Everybody
knows who the parties behind these acts of terrorism are. It is
definitely the Baloch nationalist parties," says a senior police
official.
This view is borne out by statements of various nationalist
leaders who claim that the terrorist attacks are part and parcel
of the Baloch struggle for liberation from the clutches of Punjabi-dominated
Islamabad. "I do not really know who they are, but I appreciate
the actions of those who have masterminded and executed these actions,
and I hope a Baloch is involved," stated the head of the Pakistan
Oppressed Nations Movement (PONM) and former Chief Minister Balochistan,
Sardar Attaullah Mengal. "What Islamabad terms terrorism is
in fact the legitimate struggle of the weak, undertaken in self-defence,
and those who sacrifice their lives do not care how many lives their
actions take," he said. Similar statements were made on record
by Hairbyar Marri, former minister Balochistan and the son of renowned
nationalist leader, Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri. "I must salute
those who carried out these attacks in Gwadar and other parts of
Balochistan, as they are part of the Baloch national struggle for
liberation from the yoke of Punjabi colonialists, which burns in
the heart of every Baloch," said Marri, an absconder in the
late Justice Marri case, over the telephone, from London.
The parliamentary nationalist parties have, meanwhile, expressed
regret over the loss of the lives of the Chinese nationals and reiterated
their commitment to the project. Jan Mohammad Buledi, an MPA of
Dr Abdul Hayee's Balochistan National Party (BNP), tabled a resolution
in the Balochistan Assembly on behalf of the opposition to condemn
the Gwadar incident and expressed his grief over the loss of lives.
The opposition parties also participated in a one-minute silence
to pay respect to the departed souls of the Chinese engineers involved
in the development of the province. This was followed by Hairbyar
Marri criticising the BNP for tabling the resolution, stating that
the party and its leaders wanted to please the rulers. "The
BNP, a so-called nationalist group, wants to suck up to the Punjabi
rulers and is playing a double game of running with the hare and
hunting with the hounds," he said.
Sardar Akhtar Mengal,
former chief minister Balochistan and head of his faction of the
Balochistan National Party, although expressing regret over the
loss of human lives, stated that the terrorist attacks were a natural
consequence of unjust government policies, as every action causes
a reaction.
While politicians breathe sound and fury, the confrontation between
Islamabad and nationalist forces on the Gwadar mega-project and
construction of cantonments in different areas of the province is
mounting. The acquisition of land for cantonments has already started
in Dera Bugti and Kohlu agencies, but local tribesmen in Dera Bugti
have refused to sell their land to the government. The forceful
evacuation of people in Sui town engendered protest in front of
the assembly building on the eve of its previous session. The nationalist
parties' alliance, PONM, have just finished a month-long tour to
mobilise people across the province against the Gwadar port and
cantonments. Despite government efforts to sabotage the movement,
the Jamhoori Watan Party succeeded in staging a seminar for nationalist
forces and ARD component parties in Quetta. Through a declaration,
the seminar's participants, including the mainstream political parties
PPP and PML(N), strongly opposed the construction of cantonments
and demanded that the government drop the project, declaring that
the benefits of Gwadar's development must go to the locals and the
Balochi population alone.
The government, in a half-hearted counter-effort, asked the newly-formed
Pakistan Workers Party to arrange a similar seminar in local hotels
to dilute the effects of the opposition campaign. However, not a
single tribal personality or member of the political parties that
really matter, participated in the government-sponsored seminar.
While provincial ministers of both the MMA and BNP (Awami) are supportive
of the federal projects, their central leaders remain opposed. Maulana
Mohammad Khan Sheerani, MNA and provincial head of the MMA, has
warned the Baloch population against the construction of cantonments
in various parts of the province and the Gwadar project. "The
warring Baloch tribes must unite against outside interference in
Balochistan by shunning their differences, and the federal government
should refrain from any action against these tribes as it will cause
a major clash," Sheerani has stated.
In a press conference, the chief organiser of BNP(Awami), Senator
Mohim Khan Baloch, while opposing the cantonments, has called for
the government to remove the Baloch people's apprehensions regarding
the Gwadar port. "In the prevailing situation there is no need
for the construction of cantonments in Balochistan, while the government
must remove the apprehensions of the people of Balochistan regarding
mega-development projects," Mohim Khan said.
The nationalist parties have repeatedly asserted that the federal
government's discriminatory treatment of the province is an indication
that these projects will only benefit the Punjabi elite, while the
Baloch have nothing to gain from them.
The federal government has, meanwhile, approached Baloch nationalists
for discussions on oil and gas explorations. The task of negotiating
with Baloch nationalists Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri, Sardar Mengal
and Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti has been assigned to Dr. Abdul Hakeem
Lahri, the head of the Balochistan National Congress, who has so
far met with Attaullah Mengal and Bugti.
Senior officials also confirm that Islamabad has realised that a
process of negotiations with nationalist groups and political personalities
related to Balochistan needs to be initiated. Unless this process
is started, the bomb blasts, which have continued to terrorise the
province for the last four years, will not stop.
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