By
Ludovica Iaccino
During a conference held in Geneva on 26 June, human rights activists
and members of the Balochistan Republican Party (BRP) urged the
international community to pay attention to crimes committed by the
Pakistani government against Baloch people.
BRP's founder
Brahamdagh Khan Bugti – who fled Balochistan in 2006 after his
grandfather and prominent Baloch leader Akbar Khan Bugti was
assassinated – said: "Baloch are deprived of their national identity,
their land and resources.They are the most oppressed people in the
world, but unfortunately their plight has been ignored by the
international community for years.
"After the assassination of my
grandfather, military operations, abductions and killings have become a
routine in Balochistan, where people are subjected to a systematic
genocide in response to their call for independence," he continued.
"Thousands have been forced to flee to neighbouring countries and they now live in miserable conditions."
Khan
also alleged that the Pakistani government has intensified its attacks
on Balochistan following investments provided by China, which he said
will "bring more deaths and destruction".
He added that
anti-terrorism funds provided by the US are also contributing to a spike
in the attacks, while Pakistan "continues to export terrorists to
Western countries overseas and next door.
"We appeal to the UN and
the international community to immediately suspend aid to Pakistan and
pave the way for independence of Balochistan," he continued.
Dr Lakhu Luhana, chairman of the World Sindhi Congress,
said: "In recent days there has been an unprecedented escalation of
ferocity on Baloch and Sindhi people in Balochistan. We are living under
fascist rule, which is worse than Hitler in Germany.
"They
[Pakistan] want to finish Baloch and Sindhi people once and for all.
They want to convert us to minorities. If the international community
fails to stop this, it will fail us, it will fail humanity. "
Human Rights Watch has released several reports on abducted people in Balochistan. In 2015, the NGO said
that since 2009 authorities have recovered the bodies of 4,557
suspected victims of enforced disappearance and subsequent extrajudicial
execution, of which 266 remain unidentified.
"Those figures reflect the brutal toll of government agencies' deplorable practice
of abducting people and then denying holding them, or not providing
information about their fate or whereabouts," the report read.
"Such enforced disappearances
– most often of men and boys – occur regularly throughout Pakistan,
particularly in Balochistan and north west Pakistan, but also in Punjab
and Sindh provinces. Under international law, an enforced disappearance
is a 'continuous' crime: it persists, and continues to inflict suffering
on the victim's family, as long as the fate of the missing person is
unknown or concealed."
Amnesty for Baloch militants
The
500-strong BLA is Balochistan's largest separatist group. It has
carried out several deadly attacks against Pakistani police, army
members and civilians since its formation in 2000.
One of its
deadliest attacks occurred in 2009, when the group kidnapped and killed
19 Pakistani police personnel in Sui, Dera Bugti District.
Pakistan declared BLA a terrorist organisation in 2006, while the UK deemed it as a proscribed group.
Earlier
in June, Balochistan's provincial government announced a general
amnesty for Baloch nationalist militants engaged in armed struggles with
Pakistan.
"It was decided that a peaceful, conciliatory
Balochistan policy will be implemented so that the youngsters who want
to lay down arms and join the mainstream can be granted amnesty and be
encouraged to rehabilitate themselves," the government said in a
statement, urging those who are living in the mountains to go back to
their families.
Pakistan's response
When contacted by IBTimes UK, the London High Commission for Pakistan
said: "The allegation that Pakistan Army 'routinely abducts and kills'
Baloch people for demanding independence from Pakistan is completely
false. Balochistan is an undisputed and integral part of Pakistan from
its very inception.
"There are some political and economic
grievances which have been raised by the Balochistan province over the
years. The Federal government is cognisant of these and is making
efforts to address this through a political process and economic
measures," the commission continued, adding that terrorist organisations
are involved in activities in Balochistan.
"These terrorist
organisations, with the help of some external elements, have time and
again admitted to killing security personnel and also innocent people,"
the commission said. "The organisations that continue to use violence
will have to be taken on by the state and the security agencies are the
tool to do that end. So it is not the army but the state of Pakistan
that has taken on these terrorist organisations. In any case within
Balochistan it is the Frontier Corps that is the lead agency and not the
army.
"The judiciary in Pakistan is independent. Cases have been
lodged in the courts regarding missing people or those killed. Not a
single case has been proven against the security agencies in any illegal
disappearance or extrajudicial killing.
"Another aspect of this
manoeuvre is to internationalise this issue through media and other NGOs
who don't have ground knowledge but tend to believe these self exiled
leaders of so-called 'Baloch Struggle Movements' which are in effect
foreign-funded terrorist organisations.
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/balochistan-baloch-leader-calls-citizens-most-oppressed-world-urges-halt-aid-pakistan-1508447
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
replica bags in bangkok read this article l7t39k0q91 replica bags toronto replica bags korea gucci fake g9m38i4t05 7a replica bags philippines try here e7j85o7w37 cheap designer bags replica replica bags lv
Post a Comment