Quetta

Mengal, Mahrang, and Mandela

The federal government needs to constitute a high-powered parliamentary commission with representation from the small provinces, including stakeholders, to look into the grievances of the Baloch people.

By Ambassador M. Alam Brohi | May 2025


We have recently witnessed a spike in terrorist attacks in the vulnerable regions of Balochistan and KPK. The increased violence in Balochistan triggered a strong reaction from the federal and provincial governments. As a countermeasure, the provincial government initiated a heavy-handed crackdown on the Baloch Yakjehti Committee, arresting its woman leadership, including Dr. Mahrang Baloch. Politicians and tribal elders condemned this as an extreme measure showing disrespect to the Baloch women, particularly when they had no role in the deterioration of security conditions in the province. The Baloch Yakjehti Committee is engaged in political protests against disappearances. There has been no precedent of such violation of the Baloch traditions in the previous uprisings of March 1948, September 1955, and July 1973.

This has prompted certain political leaders to take action in defence of the honor and dignity of the Baloch women. Sardar Akhtar Mengal, who had earlier resigned from the National Assembly, has been holding a sit-in at Lakpass, on the outskirts of Quetta, for the past three weeks, because he was not allowed to enter the provincial capital city. The government’s coercive policy would further fuel public discontent and anger among the people of Balochistan and widen the gulf between the rulers and the ruled.

The worsening security situation in Balochistan has sparked an academic discussion about the redemption of the security situation in the province. In the aftermath of the violent attack on the Jaffar Express, the situation in Balochistan gained heightened attention within the country and abroad. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif paid a flying visit to Quetta. A huddle of the parliamentary leaders also followed it. However, the statements that followed this flurry of activities dampened the hopes of those who stand for a negotiated political settlement.

The Prime Minister talked in military terms, vowing to make Pakistan a hard state and crushing the violent uprising in the rugged province. His government considers the current violent situation in Balochistan a security issue rather than a political one. Accordingly, the only solution to this festering problem is: the Baloch insurgents should unconditionally surrender or face the kinetic wrath of the state. We need to separate the chaff from the wheat. The armed insurgency needs to be dealt with severely. However, the grievances of the Baloch populations deserve to be looked into through a political lens by a broad-based forum for an acceptable solution. The inflexible and hardened stances never bridge the distance between rulers and the disaffected population. How can a hard state help resolve an issue as old as that of Baloch grievances?

President Asif Zardari sounded more conciliatory. He promised to establish a camp office to address the Baloch grievances which, we all know, are well spread over the past seven decades and range from the resilient demands for ownership over their resources; political and economic autonomy within the meaning of the agreement signed by the leadership of Pakistan with the last Khan of Kalat, Mir Ahmed Yar Khan, and fair and just share in the federal funds and jobs. Well, all this is above the President’s capacity and mandate. The Baloch leadership would not compromise on these demands given Balochistan’s current shifting political dynamics.

While approaching the Balochistan issue, we should keep two facts in mind. First, the unrest in the province has a historic background beginning with the annexation of Balochistan into Pakistan in March-April 1948; its merger into the infamous One-Unit in September 1955; the arbitrary dismissal of the elected government of National Awami Party headed by Sardar Attaullah Mengal in July 1973, arrest and incarceration of Baloch leaders in Hyderabad, and the violent murder of Sardar Akbar Bugti in 2006. Throughout all these rebellious uprisings, the Baloch suffered untold miseries, facing disappearances, jails, and executions. Their grievances apart, they, most importantly, never abandoned their mainstream political activities within the constitution of Pakistan.

Second, talks were also held earlier with Baloch nationalists for the ultimate salvation of the situation in the province. The angry Baloch leaders, tricked into a reconciliation process in the early 1960s, laid down their weapons on the government’s guarantees for a new era of national harmony. Instead, Nawab Nauroz Khan Zehri, his sons, nephews, and close aides were arrested and jailed in Hyderabad and Sukkur. In prison, they were tried, and seven of them were executed. Nawab Nauroz Khan, over 85 years old, died of distress in the Jail.

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One thought on “MENGAL, MAHRANG, AND MANDELA

  • May 3, 2025 at 12:03 am
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    Very comprehensive analysis based on the facts. Pakistan can progress and prosper if only one factor of blame game of labelling any one as traitor or anti state is taken out (one who is vocal and raises his or her voice for the rights of common men). Distribution of resources in between federating units by centre according to laid down global norms is the only issue for this unrest and it is the prime reason. For understanding the root cause and its solution clear intention and wisdom is required that is generally lacking.

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