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No place for elements
obstructing development
THE MESSAGE given by President Pervez Musharraf at the Mirani Dam
inauguration ceremony to anti-development elements on Thursday was loud
and clear. The Government writ had to be established in the province of
Balochistan so as to defeat retrogressive forces. A handful of
politicians and their supporters had been desperately trying to sabotage
the massive development work under execution in Balochistan with a view
to serving their petty interests.
While opening Rs. 6 billion dam in District Turbat which will bring
under plough over 13,000 acres of barren land, President assured the
people of Pakistan’s most backward province that resources needed to
help upgrade their quality of life would be provided. The project was
launched in the year 2002 though it was conceived as early as 1956.
President Musharraf indicated that he would be inaugurating another
Subakzai Dam in March next year. It is heartening to note that the
Government is spending a colossal amount on construction of canals to
irrigate barren lands.
The President’s announcement that Aeronautical Complex at Kamra and the
Pakistan Ordinance Factories at Wah Cantonment had been advised to train
youth from Balochistan was a step in the right direction. Apart from
mega, medium small development projects, massive resources are required
for human resource development in Balochistan. The people the largest
province have lagged behind other areas of the country. Their priority
No. one is education. All out efforts are required to spread literacy
amongst the illiterate masses who have been groaning under the yoke of
decadent Sardari system. The so-called Baloch nationalists are however
involved in a losing battle with the law-enforcement agencies to
perpetuate the status quo in order to retain their stranglehold over the
down-trodden masses so that they continue to exploit them and usurp
province’s resources.
Successive Governments had failed to eliminate the root causes of the
deprivation of the people of Balochistan. Their backwardness, abject
poverty, illiteracy, etc. had driven a section of the population to the
ranks of the militants operating at the behest of the so-called
champions of their rights. It is important that at every tier of the
Federal Government and Provincial Administration there should be a
committed effort to improve living conditions of the people in
Balochistan who enjoy equal rights with the people of other provinces to
share the benefits of development.
Lawlessness can not and should not be tolerated. Those trying to
sabotage development of the province to promote their self-interests
have no place in the province. President Pervez Musharraf has rightly
warned them that should they try to “hurl one rocket at law-enforcement
agencies”; strong reprisal in the shape of ten rockets would ensue.
Troops for Darfur
The New UN proposals outlined yesterday in Kenya by Secretary-General
Kofi Annan appear to offer a compromise solution between the full
deployment of international troops in Darfur, which is opposed by the
Sudanese government, and the African Union force, which itself admits
that it has been struggling to make an impact on the continuing
violence. The work-around, which is currently being considered by
Khartoum, is that the African Union force should continue in place but
be supported financially and logistically by UN peacekeeping forces.
The Sudanese likely suspect that such a hybrid deployment will prove the
thin end of the wedge; once the UN has a foot in the door and assuming
that the violence does not cease, the physical UN presence could start
to grow. The UN may find itself in need of soldiers on the ground to
protect its logistical and humanitarian bases or guard supply convoys
moving through the large and lawless region of Darfur, which have come
under assault before. Such a creeping deployment would likely be every
bit as hard to stop as the brutal violence that has spurred the
intervention of international forces in the first place.
Nevertheless, it is hard to see any alternate solution. The Janjaweed
and rebel factions continue to clash, and rural, poverty-stricken
communities continue to be victims of bloody assaults. The violence
since 2003 has left hundreds of thousands dead or displaced in refugee
camps. At worst, elements of the Sudanese armed forces (particularly in
the form of air support) have been colluding, with or without the
knowledge of their top commanders, in assaults on refugee camps and
villages containing rebels or their supporters. To this appalling
campaign of murder, rape, robbery and starvation have been added the
growing tensions with neighboring Chad, whose government yesterday
warned that the violence and refugees spilling over the border threatens
regional stability. It is, therefore, imperative that whatever
arrangements are made, they work quickly. Annan’s hybrid-force proposal
should allow AU troops to move far more effectively in stopping the
violence. The command of the mission will remain with the AU and UN
military advisers. Police and security personnel can work from the AU
headquarters. This remains then an excellent opportunity for AU members
to work together to cool one of Africa’s hot zones (by far not the only
one, even in East Africa). Properly resourced and supported, AU
peacekeepers may have a real impact in Darfur.
The key factor remains the will of the Sudanese government to act
decisively to bring an end to this dangerous tragedy. If Khartoum were
to turn down the Annan compromise, it would send entirely the wrong
message both to the international community and the southern Sudanese
members of the Coalition government. That message would be that Khartoum
simply doesn’t care that the Janjaweed militias (and possibly certain
rogue elements within Sudan’s armed forces) are conducting a reign of
terror against other Sudanese.
—Arab News
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