It
is a cover-up of ludicrous proportions - and there are
no two opinions on that. Assorted government spokespersons
still continue to give their own version on Bugti's
death, and no two versions converge.
Reporters
and ordinary people are having a field day picking holes
in the stories. If Bugti's body was, indeed, crushed
under the rubble of the cave, how were his spectacles
and watch retrieved without a single scratch? The DCO
Quetta displayed a worm crawling in the spectacle case
- as if to prove his point. Why was the casket carrying
Bugti's body padlocked? "Because we didn't want
to seal it with nails in case the family wanted to see
his body," said the DG, ISPR. So why wasn't the
body simply handed over to the family for burial? "Because
there were divisions within the family on where to bury
him - in Dera Bugti or Quetta," said the Balochistan
governor.
The
official explanations bordered on the bizarre. The government
was unabashedly unrepentant. Rather it appeared defiant
and determined in its mission to "sort out"
(read murder?) some more "miscreants" (as
it brands them).
Frankly
speaking, the army needs to sort itself out in order
to grasp the consequences of what is possibly about
to hit them. For the young Baloch are livid and raring
to go. For all his flaws, the "martyred" Bugti
is now serving as a rallying cry for all those nationalists
who have been lamenting the backwardness of their province,
the lack of infrastructure, health and educational facilities,
the people's lack of control over their own resources
and, more recently, the army's attempts to dig their
jackboots in through the construction of cantonments
and the Gwadar port project. They complain that outsiders
are taking over their assets, their land and their jobs
- all in the name of development - and they are in danger
of being converted into a minority in their own province.
There was obviously a lot of mistrust between the province
and the centre, and Bugti's killing has exacerbated
the tension. If the government thinks it can continue
work on the Gwadar and other projects without the inclusion
of the Baloch as equal partners, they are living in
a fool's paradise.
To
borrow yet another phrase from the General's lingo,
"This is not 1971." Crushing the rebellion
(as opposed to quelling the riots) will not be an easy
task, as the Baloch are not alone in their struggle.
Moral support within the country aside, they are acquiring
material support from outside sources, allegedly Afghanistan
and India who, in a tit-for-tat response to Pakistan's
erstwhile manoeuvres in Kashmir and Kabul, are now fishing
in Pakistan's troubled waters. And then there's also
that story in a US defence journal that not only mentions
America's desire to redraw the borders of the Middle
East but also speaks of an independent Balochistan.
So
the battle lines are drawn. Will the army seize the
moment, step back and move forward on the recommendations
on Balochistan made by the high profile parliamentary
committee in 2005, or will it pull the trigger on a
political initiative and set the country on a disastrous
course that could spell the beginning of the end of
the federation of Pakistan.