Is Nuclear Pakistan on verge of anti-Musharraf Civil War



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Topic: Politics > Politics-USA
User: "cui bono"
Date: 22 Mar 2005 08:22:19 PM
Object: Is Nuclear Pakistan on verge of anti-Musharraf Civil War
Pakistan's tribes on brink of civil war
Declan Walsh in Dera Bugti
Monday March 21, 2005
The Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/pakistan/Story/0,2763,1442194,00.html?gusrc=rss
More than 3,000 people fled a desert town in western Pakistan
yesterday as a simmering conflict between tribesmen and President
Pervez Musharraf's government risked exploding into all-out civil
war.
A day-long battle in the town of Dera Bugti, 400 miles south-west of
Islamabad, last week killed at least 45 people, including eight
soldiers from the Frontier Corps, a paramilitary force charged with
maintaining order in the tribal areas.
Yesterday a fragile ceasefire was holding as hundreds of heavily
armed tribesmen gathered on the line of jagged hilltops overlooking
a besieged garrison of 300 soldiers.
At the other end of the dust-blown town, the 78-year-old Bugti leader,
Akbar Khan Bugti, directed his forces from inside a mud-walled fort.
"The situation is very tense. You can expect anything to happen,"
said the local administrator, Abdul Samad Lasi.
Conflict has been brewing for more than a year in Baluchistan, a
vast, unruly and mineral-rich province that covers 44% of Pakistan,
yet has just 5% of its 150 million people. Insurgents have blown up
railway lines and phone exchanges, toppled power pylons and fired
rockets into army bases and police stations, as part of a low-level
guerrilla campaign against the Musharraf government.
So far the death toll has been relatively light. But the standoff in
Dera Bugti, apparently sparked by an attack on a government convoy,
risks plunging the province into a far deadlier conflict.
The insurgency is led by the Baluchistan Liberation Army (BLA), a
previously unknown group seen as a flag of convenience for the
disgruntled tribesmen. First among them are the pugnacious Bugti and
their white-bearded nawab, or chieftain, Akbar Khan Bugti.
"The rebels are like fleas," Nawab Bugti told the Guardian shortly
before last week's fighting. "Even one flea can sting and bite. The
dog's reaction is to bite back - particularly if he is a mad dog. But
now the fleas are multiplying."
Outside the fort entrance, tribal gunmen in baggy trousers stood
guard. Their long, whiskery beards and archaic weapons had echoes of
the British Raj, when chieftains like Bugti came to dominance. Some
fighters brandished Kalashnikovs, but others carried Enfield .303
rifles - first world war-issue weapons handed down by their
grandfathers, they said.
Money, honour and nationalism are driving the bloodshed. Although
Baluchistan is rich in oil, gas and other minerals, most of which
remain unexploited, its people are the poorest and least educated in
Pakistan. A 2003 UN study found that Dera Bugti had the lowest
standard of living of any Pakistani district.
In contrast, the giant Sui gas plant, 30 miles to the south on Bugti
land, pumps about 45% of Pakistan's production. The sense of
alienation from far-off Islamabad is widespread.
"It is a great injustice," said a goat herder, Foj Ali, angrily
clutching a 20 rupee [18p] note in the town market. "They are making
billions of rupees pumping gas from our land to the rest of the
country, and we are still using firewood."
Critics counter that the nawab and other tribal leaders are also to
blame. "The sardars [chiefs] will not allow anything - schools, roads
or army posts - that could undermine their authority," a senior
government official in Baluchistan said.
The Baluchi have a long history of chafing against central authority,
having revolted four times since independence in 1947. Today they
still consider their government a foreign and colonising force - a
hostility that was visible on the streets of Dera Bugti before last
week's fighting.
A contingent of Frontier Corps soldiers were cornered at one end of
the town, crouched inside a shoulder-high turret of sandbags and
watching helplessly as jeeps filled with armed tribesmen defiantly
raced past.
"For us, Pakistan means Punjabis," said Brahumdagh Bugti, the
chieftain's 24-year-old grandson, referring to the province that
dominates Pakistan's army.
In January the police issued a warrant for Brahumdagh's arrest,
accusing him of leading a three-day attack on the Sui gas
installation that left 15 people dead. Reports that a doctor had been
raped on the premises enraged the tribesmen, who saw the attack on
the woman as an infraction of their strict tribal code. The alleged
culprit was also a government soldier.
The rape was a lightening rod for wider discontent across the
province. Hardly a day has passed since January when BLA insurgents
have not attacked a train, police station or army post. Their focus
is the provincial capital, Quetta, which is also riven by tit-for-tat
sectarian conflict. Yesterday a bomb ripped through a Shia mosque in
the city, killing at least 29 people.
Baluchistan is also a frontline in the hunt for al-Qaida militants,
possibly including Osama bin Laden.
Bugti, who was educated by British colonists at Aitchison College in
Lahore - known as the "Eton of Pakistan" - in the 1940s, has a
polished English accent and is a self-taught scholar in the classics.
But he has also been jailed for murder, runs a private prison and has
been involved in countless blood feuds.
The province's fractious tribes appear to have rallied behind him.
Some, for instance, have forgiven old feuds to reopen sealed roads
leading to Bugti territory.
After threatening to crush the upheaval by armed force, President
Musharraf has sent envoys to seek a negotiated solution. Now, though,
the stakes are higher - a wrong move against the Bugti could spark a
chain of violence across Baluchistan.
But the army-led government has never been further from winning local
hearts and minds. "The pupils have been brainwashed," said Javeria
Qadeer, the deputy principal of Dera Bugti school, which has been
closed by decree of the nawab since January. "They say they don't
like the name of Pakistan. They say their country is Baluchistan."
This article linked from: http://www.antiwar.com/
__________________________________________
The dangerous patriot...is a defender of militarism
and its ideals of war and glory.
~Colonel James A. Donovan, Marine Corps
__________________________________________
We say that we care about the war, but we don’t
even really know what we’re fighting for.
~Scott Ritter
__________________________________________
The urge to save humanity is almost always only a
false-face for the urge to rule it.
~H. L. Mencken
__________________________________________
Guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism.
~George Washington
__________________________________________
I just want you to know that, when we talk about war,
we're really talking about peace.
~George W. Bush

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