Pakistan: Armed
encounters or open war
Experts have
been saying for a long time that various groups getting funds and arms from
outside have developed safe heavens in Balochistan and federally administered
tribal area (Fata) of Pakistan.
In
Balochistan they claim to be fighting for the rights of Balochs and in Fata for
the imposition of Sharia. However, the sole objective of these insurgents is to
create discontent by weakening Pakistan for the ultimate creation of
independent Balochistan and Pushtunistan.
Experts have
the consensus that since both the areas, though located at some distance, are
rich in oil, gas and minerals are the focus of promoters of the new global
order.
These forces are trying to get control over Pakistan’s energy reserves
by fragmenting the country. In different areas miscreants wear different caps
but the objective is common.
Pakistan’s
security forces have repeatedly come under attack in Balochistan. This could be
termed ‘challenging writ of the government’. In the latest incident dozens of
armed men raided a pro-government tribal militia post, killing one man and
abducting five.
The early
morning raid took place in Dera Bugti district, about 400 kilometers southeast
of provincial capital Quetta. There was no immediate claim of responsibility
for the attack.
Armed men attacked
the post and whisked away five members of the tribal force in their vehicles
after forcing them to surrender. One man who resisted was shot dead by the
assailants.
Local administration
confirmed the raid and informed security forces had been rushed to the area and
a search operation had been launched.
It is often
said that Balochistan is home to a local insurgency. The insurgents demand
political autonomy and a greater share of profits from the province’s oil and
gas resources.
The province
has become a flashpoint for sectarian violence. Lately, Prime Minister Raja Pervez
Ashraf sacked the provincial government in Balochistan after a sit in by
the relatives of nearly 100 people killed in twin blasts in Quetta.
After that a
serious constitutional crisis brewed in when the Speaker of the provincial assembly
summoned a session. The immediate response was that the Speaker had disregarded
the fact that the province was under Governor’s Rule.
Perplexed
constitutional and legal experts wondered did the assembly want to play the
role of a parallel government against the one headed by Governor Zulfiqar Ali
Magsi?
According to
another report the death toll in a gun-battle that erupted between the banned
outfit Teheek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and its rival group Ansar-ul-Islam (AI)
in the Khyber tribal region has crossed 60.
The
gun-fight had started late on Thursday in Maidan village in Khyber’s Tirah
Valley. Most of the dead were militants but some local tribesmen were also
killed.
Khyber is
among Pakistan’s seven semi-autonomous tribal districts near the Afghan border
that has been made home by local insurgents and religious extremist organizations
including the TTP. Khyber also links several agencies to each other, serving as
a north-south route within Fata.
The remote
Tirah valley holds strategic significance for militant groups. On one side, it
shares a border with Afghanistan and on the other it leads to the plains of
Bara, which connect the agency to the outskirts of Peshawar.