29/09/2016
29/09/2016
Mazdak Dilshad Baloch (center), son of prominent author-activist Naela Qadri Baloch and filmmaker Mir Ghulam Mustafa Raisaini who lives in Canada in exile, climbs a police barricade during a protest against Pakistan’s ongoing human right violation in Balochistan, in New Delhi on Sept 29. (AFP)baISLAMABAD, Sept 29, (RTRS): The elusive leader of a major rebel group fighting for independence in Pakistan’s Baluchistan province said he would welcome cash and other help from India, words likely to alarm Islamabad which accuses New Delhi of stirring trouble there.
In his first video interview in five years, Allah Nazar Baloch, head of the ethnic Baluch group Baluchistan Liberation Front (BLF), also vowed further attacks on a Chinese economic corridor, parts of which run through the resource-rich province.
The planned $46 billion trade route is expected to link western China with Pakistan’s Arabian Sea via a network of roads, railways and energy pipelines. “We not only wish India should support the Baluch national struggle diplomatically and financially, but the whole world,” said Baloch, a doctor-turned-guerrilla believed to be about 50, in filmed responses to questions sent by Reuters.
Baloch’s appeal for Indian help may deepen Pakistani suspicions that India has a hand in a decades-old insurgency in the vast southwestern province. Historically fraught relations between the nuclear-armed neighbours deteriorated this month after 18 Indian soldiers in Kashmir were killed in an attack on an army base that New Delhi blames on Pakistan. Pakistan denies the accusation. On Thursday, India said it had carried out strikes on suspected militants in its first direct military response to the raid.
Buildup
“We welcome the statement that Narendra Modi gave to morally support the Baluch nation,” added Baloch, clad in a traditional beige shalwar kurta outfit, with an automatic rifle across his lap and ammunition hanging from his belt. Pakistan’s military had no comment on Baloch’s interview. Baloch is the only leader of a sizeable separatist group who is believed to be waging a guerrilla war from inside Baluchistan; the other two leaders are in exile in Europe.
Brunt
Those fears grew in March when Pakistan arrested a man it said was a RAW spy in Baluchistan, and accused him of “subversive activities”. India denied he was a spy. Brahamdagh Bugti, the Switzerland- based leader of the Balochistan Republican Party, another major separatist outfit, last week told Indian media that he planned to seek “political asylum” in India.
BLF chief Baloch claims to have “thousands” of fighters. Domestic news coverage of the Baluchistan conflict is rare and foreign journalists are broadly forbidden from visiting the province. Baloch answered questions in a video recording, which was sent electronically. Although the exact date of the recording could not be verified, he was responding to questions sent by Reuters six weeks ago.
His responses contradicted government claims that he had been killed last year. China’s investment in the China- Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) has brought fresh focus on Baluchistan, which is endowed with rich but largely unexploited reserves of copper and gold. Several planned CPEC routes will snake across Baluchistan to its deepsea port in Gwadar.
