Monday, February 28, 2011

SIRAJ-UD-DIN (SHAHEED) JOURNALIST “ DAILY THE NATION”


To All the Members of PFUJ,

MY BELOVED FATHER SIRAJ-UD-DIN (SHAHEED) JOURNALIST “ DAILY THE NATION”

Dear All,

My beloved father Mr.Sirajuddin was a journalist and associated with journalism for more than two decades. For the last three years he was associated with the English Daily “The Nation” as Staff Reporter before his sad demise on February 29, 2008.
My Father (Shaheed), first he was seriously injured in a suicide attack on the funeral of late DSP, Javed Iqbal in Haji baba School, Mingora on February 29, 2008 while performing his professional duties succumbed to his injuries and embraced martyrdom.
As I accompanied my father on that fateful evening, I am an eyewitness to the blood and gore, which created a wave of trauma and hysteria all over the valley. The spectacle was so horrifying and devastating that words fell short to describe it. It will haunt me for the rest of my life. No one can forget the colossal human loss on that cursed evening. And none can substantiate why my innocent father was murdered so brutally.
Today for the first time the 3rd death anniversary of The Nation Staff Reporter and my father Journalist Siraj ud Din (Shaheed) was observed on a plat form (Swat Press Club). In this connection Swat Union of journalists have chalked out a programme at Swat press club to pay rich tribute to the work and sacrifices rendered by the martyr journalist who is one of the founders of Swat Press Club.

He had been served his services in Journalism for 23 years, My father Siraj Uddin (Shaheed) had made an impression on his colleagues. He played a pioneering role in the field of objective journalism in the region and was also a role model in the profession. He was a kind, decent and curious. He was also a freedom fighter.

Respected Members, I have been watching you people on television in several live transmission saying that the Journalists of Pakistan especially at swat sacrificed their lives and covered every event in the own going war against terrorism, I would like to draw yours kind attention towards my father martyrdom. We are amongst those families who are directly suffered. My father breathed his last in my arms before my eyes. How can a son forget all this? How can he console his heart that for what crime his beloved father was so brutally murdered?

Adding more for your kind attention that so far not government official neither PFUJ member contacted us even no body made up sympathy call or messages in the past three years. Last year Prime Minister announced that one member of each family who lost a family member in the war against terrorism will get employment in government institution. Government pledges are at large made to the our family. I request you people to kindly take personal interest in my appeal and remind the PM his pledge made to us to please provide government employment to my brother Asif Ali who is done his MBA. We hope for and seek the help of the PFUJ in these helpless, tragic and heartrending circumstances.

Further More,

1. It was announced by President that each victim of the violence in swat would be compensated. The compensation amount announced was Rs. 300,000.00 (Rupees Three Hundred Thousand Only) for each of the dead. So far we did not appear to have received the compensation, announced by President. We wrote again to Presidency office in the same matter, copy of its reply is attached for your kind attention.
Some of the victims of the suicide attack in which my father embraced martyrdom have been compensated from the announced Presidential Funds. We request PFUJ to please provide us this compensation amount to overcome our financial constraints and limitations.
2. In addition to this the benefits, provided by the Government of Pakistan, to which the journalists and their families are entitled after their demise should kindly urged the government officials to provide us.
a. Inclusion of my father’s name in the Journalist Victim Fund
b. Allotment of plot in the Journalist Colon Either in Peshawer or at Islamabad
I am writing this letter with great expectations and hope that PFUJ will certainly seek out a way to help us in these hours of distress and suffering.
Always praying for the good will of Pakistan.
Haroon Siraj
Correspondent Daily The Nation at Swat

S/O
Siraj-ud-Din (Shaheed)
House#02, Siraj-ud-Din Street,
Kalam Road Fizagat,
Mingora Swat.

Ph: Res: 0946-814275
Cell: 0301-8524008

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Director-General condems murder of Pakistani journalist Abdost Rind in Balochistan



Director-General condems murder of Pakistani journalist Abdost Rind in Balochistan

28-02-2011 (Paris)

The Director-General of UNESCO, Irina Bokova, today condemned the shooting to death of Abdost Rind, a reporter with the Urdu-language newspaper Daily Eagle on 18 February in Pakistan’s Balochistan province and voiced concern over the safety of media workers in the region.

“I condemn the murder of Abdos Rind,” the Director-General declared. “The killing of Abdos Rind raises further concern over the ability of media workers in Pakistan to exercise the fundamental human right of freedom of expression. All of us depend on free media to engage in informed debate and make responsible choices.”

Mr Rind is reported to have been shot repeatedly by unidentified assailants on his way home from work. He is the second media worker killed in Balochistan this year, according to the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ).

Reporters Without Borders says that 11 journalists were killed in Pakistan in 2010, making it the most dangerous place in the world for the profession.

UNESCO is the United Nations agency with a mandate to defend freedom of expression and press freedom. Article 1 of its Constitution requires the Organization to “further universal respect for justice, for the rule of law and for the human rights and fundamental freedoms which are affirmed for the peoples of the world, without distinction of race, sex, language or religion, by the Charter of the United Nations.” To realize this the Organization is requested to “collaborate in the work of advancing the mutual knowledge and understanding of peoples, through all means of mass communication and to that end recommend such international agreements as may be necessary to promote the free flow of ideas by word and image…”

Exploitation of Mineral Wealth

Exploitation of Mineral Wealth


Sanaullah Baloch (write to columnist)

By Sanaullah Baloch
UNITED Nations Security Council Resolutions 1173, 1176 and particularly 1295 led to the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme, an international initiative to curb the “flow of conflict diamonds” and certify the origin of rough diamonds as “conflict-free”.
However, the international community’s silence on other conflict resources i.e. gold, copper, oil, gas, coltan and uranium is aggravating the destruction of the environment and human security in the ‘unreported’ world.
In fact, across the globe, already suffering communities are encountering even more desperate situations that deprive them of their natural resources and lead to conflict, insecurity and endless poverty and hunger.
From copper, gold and gas extraction in Balochistan and illegal logging in Malaysia to the marble trade in Afghanistan and the smuggling of oil and petroleum products in Iraq and Iran, our world is plagued by the tragic exploitation of the land and its people.
Let’s take the case of Congo. Diamonds are not the only minerals fuelling conflict. It is a country of many other natural resources like gold, rubber, coltan and cassiterite. Congo should have been wealthy today. Instead, these resources have ended up fuelling one of the bloodiest conflicts since the Second World War.
After inflicting pain, persecution and plunder in Africa, many multinational companies are moving to other parts of the world including Pakistan to exploit natural wealth with the collaboration of a corrupt ruling elite. Resource-rich Balochistan is no less miserable a region than Congo. This under-reported region is strategically located and shares a 1200 km coastline with the Persian Gulf region. It also shares a 900 km border with Afghanistan’s insurgency- hit areas.
Since 1952, the centre in Islamabad has been extracting large quantities of gas and coal from Balochistan but has been denying the people of the area their rights and benefits accruing from this activity. The region has been exploited in terms of its strategic land, marine resources, uranium and countless minerals but the Baloch people have remained illiterate and destitute.
Why haven’t Pakistan’s ‘blood and conflict’ resources never attracted international attention? Conversely, the discovery of what is said to be the world’s second largest copper-gold reserve, Reko Diq, in Balochistan’s Chaghi region has attracted many greedy companies, benefiting from corrupt deals.
The multibillion copper-gold Saindak project is also situated in the Pakistani province of Balochistan. The resources here are being extracted by a Chinese company, without any independent monitoring for the past seven years. According to official reports copper-gold worth $633.573m were produced during 2004-08. The Balochistan government receives a paltry two per cent share, while half the profits go to Beijing and 48 per cent to Islamabad. The fortified Saindak project is a no-go area for the Baloch people.
The conflict in Balochistan is very well documented by reputed organisations including the International Crisis Group. It is clear that Musharraf’s military offensives against the moderate Baloch in 2005 and after resulted in immense loss of life, with the figure of the dead and displaced running into thousands. The targeted killings of Baloch activists are virtually a daily affair.
The proposed copper-gold project in Reko Diq is expected to intensify the Baloch-Islamabad conflict. In December 2009 the provincial government cancelled the Tethyan Copper Company’s licence. However, Islamabad’s corrupt elite has been pushing the provincial government to convert the cancelled exploration agreement into a mining licence, allowing Tethyan to exploit the massive deposits without Baloch consent.
In fact, when his government cancelled the project the province’s chief minister had said that the “cancellation of the Reko Diq copper and gold project agreement is a step towards getting control over provincial resources in accordance with the wishes of the people”.
Tethyan’s permission for mining will result in despair and reaction by the Baloch people who have long-standing complaints against Islamabad’s land-grabbing and forceful extraction of province’s wealth. In fact, the expected 10 billion kilograms of copper and 368 million grams of blood-soaked gold over the 50-60 year lifespan of the Reko-Diq project will end up multiplying pain and misery rather than promoting peace and development.
The way the gold-and-copper project at Reko Diq landed into the hands of the present companies, media reports suggest, might constitute one of the biggest white-collar crimes in this part of the world.
Before his resignation as finance minister, Shaukat Tarin, reacted to the unfair deal and complained: “I think we have sold our
future.”
As indicated earlier, Balochistan is not the only case where such ruthless exploitation takes place. War, misery, hunger and disease caused by the looting and plundering of natural wealth belonging to marginalised communities by unjust states, mafias, organisations and multinational corporations are rampant. Environmental destruction and insecurity are compromised. Key social indicators show that even though resource-rich such regions are home to the world’s least developed communities.
It is about time that the international community broke its silence and took firm measures to stop the unending cy
cle of misery associated with such exploitation of the land and its mineral wealth. The world should play its due role in promoting and affording protection to the “the right of peoples and nations to permanent sovereignty over their natural wealth and resources” as enshrined in the UN General Assembly Resolution 1803 (XVII) of 1962.
The UN and European Commission must establish specialised, independent bodies responsible for mapping conflict resources and combating the forceful and illegal exploitation and trade of such resources. There should be a comprehensive global mechanism for the certification of natural resources that should encourage and put restrictions on trading partners and aid recipient countries including Pakistan.


The writer is a former senator.
balochbnp@gmail.com

Judiciary, parliament silent on Baloch issues

Judiciary, parliament silent on Baloch issues


Sanaullah Baloch (write to columnist)

There are nearly three hundred and fifty arms manufacturing factories in Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). The government endorses, encourages and legalizes those factories by recognizing them as the source of income for the tribal people.

Former Senator Sanaullah Baloch is among several top Balcoh nationalist leaders who have fled Balochistan because of increasing targeted killings of Baloch leaders and political activists. Former secretary information of Balochistan National Party (BNP), Mr. Baloch is widely respected as an argumentative champion of Baloch national rights through newspaper articles, interviews and presentations at national and international conferences.

In an exclusive interview with the Sanaullah Baloch, Viewpoint spoke about the Balochistan imbroglio and possibilities of rapprochement with Islamabad. Excerpts:

How would you evaluate year 2010 for Balochistan?

The situation in Balochistan has been disconcerting since 2001. But the last three years have been very painful for Balochistan’s politics, economy and society. Violation of human rights has reached its nadir in the province. The year 2010 was the darkest and the worst year of the outgoing decade for Balochistan because more political workers went missing and were subsequently killed. Federal security forces converted Balochistan into a semi-cantonment and curtailed all basic human liberties and rights.

Who is responsible for this situation, Islamabad or Quetta?

Actually, the onus lies on the federal government. I would specially hold the Establishment, which comprises of the military, bureaucracy and policymakers, responsible for maintaining a pugnacious approach towards Balochistan. Their policy is not much different from colonial policies. They want to control Balochistan politically, economically and socially.

In order to control the society and politics of Balochistan, Islamabad has unleashed a policy of divide and rule under which it is pampering some pro-Establishment sardars, nawabs and criminal groups. The prevailing state of poverty, lawlessness, anarchy and disappointment is in fact the fallout of federal government’s deliberate policy of negligence and suppression.

No doubt, successive provincial governments are equally responsible for these wrongdoings but you have to understand that their role has not been more than that of pawns in the control of the Establishment.

What do you think were the reasons for the failure of the Aghaz-e-Haqooq-e-Balochistan Package which the government initially claimed was intended to improve the conditions in Balochistan?

When the Balochistan Package was prepared, it was one-sided. The process of conflict resolution or management does not succeed until all players of a conflict are taken into confidence. The package was only meant to fool the international community and the regional powers which want the stability of the region by telling them that Islamabad was seriously working for the Balochistan conflict’s resolution.

Political conflicts mainly originate from social and economic deprivation. The main cause of unrest in Balochistan since 1947 is the political oppression and people’s deprivation. The province is economically controlled and a special security apparatus rules the province. The official narrative is that they want to develop Balochistan but the Baloch do not accept their model of development. Therefore, they justifies the use of brute force against the Balochs.

In fact, the Balochistan Package was flawed and replete with defects. Significantly, Baloch nationalists, who are the real actors of the conflict, were not a part of the package. Nowhere in the world does conflict resolution take place in the absence of facilitators and guarantors.

One of the apparent reasons for the exclusion of the nationalists in the decision-making process was your absence from the existing parliamentary structure. Do you now realize that boycotting the general elections was a blunder the nationalists committed? Would the negotiation process succeed if the nationalists had contested the polls?

We are democratic people and want to utilize all forms of political struggle. Unfortunately, circumstances in 2008 were so adverse in Balochistan that it was not possible for the nationalists to participate in the general elections. While some Baloch leaders had been killed, the others, such as our party president Sardar Akhtar Mengal, were imprisoned. We were all forced to live in exile. Thousands of cases were registered against our political activists while the senior ones were on the government’s hit-list. How could we contest elections when harsh circumstances did not permit us field candidates, run election campaigns and mobilize public support?

The same situation still exists in Balochistan. The federal government has deliberately continued this undemocratic policy so that the genuine Baloch representatives are kept away from the electoral process and assemblies where key decisions are made. If the current situation of insecurity and oppression continues, perhaps we will not participate in future elections either.

Some people believe moderate nationalist parties like your BNP and the National Party are finding it hard to continue parliamentary politics because of the internal polarization within the Baloch society where the armed groups, headed by the disillusioned youth, are hostile toward parliamentary politics. Is it really a reason for BNP’s escape from elections and parliamentary process?

Well, there is difference of opinion (among the nationalists) on some matters. The Balochistan National Party purely believes in democratic struggle. We have never approved of resolving problems on gunpoint. We have criticized Islamabad for the same reason because it has endeavored to usurp Balochistan’s resources and rule it on gunpoint. We morally backed people who defended themselves. However, we discouraged the new trend of excessively applying violence to resolve political issues.

It is better for politics to control guns not for guns to control politics. This is one issue on which we have a difference of opinion with the armed groups operating in Balochistan. However, I believe we are all political forces and must respect each other’s right to have a different opinion and approach on various issues.

Therefore, the Baloch political parties and armed groups must respect each other’s approaches. I do not think if the armed groups have created any problems for us so far. We predominantly hold Islamabad responsible for distancing us from the political process.

Currently, all top Baloch nationalist leaders such as Sardar Akhtar Mengal, Khan of Kalat Mir Suleman Dawood, Nawabzada Hairbayar Marri, Nawabzada Bramdagh Bugti and yourself are all out of Balochistan. Are you people in touch with each other from outside the country to plan to return to Balochistan to fix the issue?

Balochistan is our motherland. Our all political struggle, similar to our senior leaders, is dedicated to Balochistan’s well being and prosperity. Life in exile is a painful one. Nobody wants to live away from one’s own people at the time of happiness or sadness. We all Baloch leaders collectively share this anguish of being forced to stay away from our own people and the politics of Balochistan.

As far as contacts between different nationalist leaders are concerned, we are all living in different places in hard conditions. It is not always easy to remain in touch with each other. Nonetheless, it does not mean that there are differences among us. We largely agree upon most issues faced by Balochistan. The BNP has always taken the initiative to unite the Balochs and we will continue our efforts to bring the Baloch leaders closer to each other on issues that we agree upon.

Last year, your party’s secretary general Habib Jalib Baloch was killed while at the end of the year the provincial president of the Jamori Watan Party (JWP) Shahzain Bugti has been arrested. How do the murders and arrests of Baloch leaders derail the peace process, if there is any, in Balochistan?

Islamabad treats our people like cattle even if they are an ordinary shepherd or a tribal chief. We are against such maltreatment of the Baloch people.

When the operation against Nawab Bugti was launched, the federal government leveled similar baseless allegations against the Baloch leaders.

There are nearly three hundred and fifty arms manufacturing factories in Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). The government endorses, encourages and legalizes those factories by recognizing them as the source of income for the tribal people. In Balochistan, the tribes and their chiefs are disrespected by the forces, an attitude which is intolerable and unacceptable to us. Regardless of our differences with certain political figures, we believe they must not be disrespected and mistreated.

The killings of our political leaders like Habib Jalib Baloch, Maula Baksh Dashti (a central committee member of the National Party and a former district Nazim of Turbat district) and Nooruddin Mengal ( a central committee member of the BNP) were in fact great losses for us as we badly needed them among us at this critical juncture. Today, no Baloch activist, leader or intellectual is safe.

How do you see the recent report published in the New York Times about Washington’s concern over the enforced disappearances in Balochistan?

If you take a look at the old State Department reports about the state of human rights in Pakistan, there is also a little description of the rights violation in Balochistan. The US government already knows what exactly is happening in Balochistan but it tends to keep silent because it does not want to irk Islamabad. What has been mentioned in the recent report hardly reflects the far worse situation that exists in the province at the moment.

Pakistani judiciary and parliamentary committees on human rights are totally silent on Baloch issues. There is a state of insecurity for people who believe in peaceful political struggle on surface. When they are deprived of this space, where else will they go except for the mountains to continue politics?

The United States of America and the European Union should take notice of the violation of human rights in the province.

Baloch nationalists often ventilate their anger over the Frontier Corps (FC) and its check posts. What actually are your grievances?

We have always demanded an end to the presence of a third party i.e. military and paramilitary forces in Balochistan. While there is no such heavy presence of security forces in the rest of the country, why is lack of trust shown toward the Balochs by deploying so many troops in Balochistan? The heavy deployment has made it impossible for the local people to grow economically, socially and politically. There are around eight to nine hundred check posts of the Frontier Corps (FC) across Balochistan. There is one check post for every population of eight thousand people. You cannot see such an overwhelming and aggressive presence of the forces in the remaining three provinces.

The FC has been granted powers under the Customs Act which means it can even monitor the movement of Balochs on the roads or in the streets. If the FC is going to perform every job then what is the need to have other state institutions?

Moreover, we have argued that the FC has a very colonial structure. For instance, the Rangers in Punjab, Sindh and FC in Khyber Pakhtunkhawa predominantly comprise of locals of those provinces but in Balochistan the FC is entirely manned with “outsiders” who often treat the local populations as their salves. The FC is a major cause of resentment because it has always had a key role in stirring trouble in the province. It is a major bone of contention rather than being a solution to the problem.

What do you suggest as confidence building measures (CBMs) to deescalate tensions?

We had been negotiating with the government since 2004. Unfortunately, it is the federal government, not the Balochs, who waged a war on us. We have always recommended that the people of Balochistan should be respectfully treated like equal citizens of the land. The federal government should clarify its expectations from Balochistan. On the other hand, we Balochs are clear about our reservations and demands.

First of all, we believe our very existence is in danger. The Baloch geography, language, culture, population and demography are all jeopardized. Our majority population is being converted into a minority. These are very genuine concerns which Islamabad should address transparently.

An unstable Balochistan will lead to more chaos in the entire region. This region is not only important for Pakistan but for many other countries of the world. They must not overlook the Baloch conflict. The international community should not see Balochistan solely as an internal administrative problem of Pakistan. Understanding the significance of the conflict, we invite the international community to mediate and facilitate conflict management between Balochs and Islamabad.

Both sides should be given a chance to state their stance and then proceed toward a win-win solution to our problems.

Agreed, Islamabad is currently using a militaristic approach to silence the Baloch dissent, I do not see the majority of Balochs giving in to such a tactic in the 21st century. A lot of Balochs may be killed in resisting this approach but I am sure our people will resist Islamabad’s belligerent style of grappling with Balochistan. We want the cycle of bloodshed, enforced disappearances, targeted killings, increase in two-sided hatred to stop for the sake of our coming generations.

http://www.viewpointonline.net/judiciary-parliament-silent-on-baloch-issues.html

Rights group calls for investigation into Pak journalist’s murder in Balochistan

Rights group calls for investigation into Pak journalist’s murder in Balochistan


New York, Feb 23: The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ) are calling for an investigation into the drive-by shooting death of Abdost Rind, a 27-year-old part-time journalist in Pakistan’s Balochistan province on February 18.

According to the PFUJ and local media reports, Rind - a reporter with the Daily Eagle, an Urdu newspaper - was shot four times before his assailants escaped on a motorcycle. He died immediately.

While the PFUJ says Rind’s family believes his killing is directly related to his work as a journalist, the CJP called for a swift police investigation to accurately determine the motive behind the killing and to bring the perpetrators to justice.

“CPJ joins with our Pakistani colleagues in calling for a swift investigation into the shooting death of Abdost Rind,” said Bob Dietz, CPJ’s Asia program coordinator.

“Pakistan’s reputation as a country where journalists are killed with impunity is among the worst in the world. To allow Rind’s death to go uninvestigated and unprosecuted will only add to that miserable record,” he added.

With eight clearly killed for their work as journalists in 2010, and several other cases in which the motive was unclear, Pakistan ranked at the top of the list of countries in which journalists are killed for their work last year, according to CPJ data.

The country also ranked 10th on CPJ’s Impunity Index, which spotlights countries where journalists are slain and killers go free.
Copyright Asian News International/DailyIndia.com

What happens to journalists when their newspaper vanishes?

What happens to journalists when their newspaper vanishes?


John Temple, the paper's former editor, president and publisher, has been finding out. Some 146 of the 194 former staff responded to his survey.

Most depressing finding: 98 (67%) said they were earning less today than they made at the Rocky, with 56 of the 98 saying their income was "much less." Only 27 (18) said they were making more - and most of them were not working in journalism.

Most surprising finding: despite the general decline in income, roughly the same amount of people reported that their life was better today than that it was worse.

Other findings: 92 are working as journalists. Of those, 44 said they are at newspapers (though some work online), and 64 of them earn less money.

More can be gleaned from the stories of Rocky journalists still working as journalists, and the stories of Rocky journalists who left the profession.

Source: John Temple

Journalism Education Foundation of New England 2011 Scholarship Program

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Thailand: Reuters journalist’s death not solved

Thailand: Reuters journalist’s death not solved (AP)

FILE - In this undated file photo released by Reuters, Japanese TV cameraman Hiro Muramoto smiles at his office in Tokyo. Thailand's Department of Special Investigation said Monday, Feb. 28, 2011 it has determined that Reuters journalist Muramoto who was killed during political protests in Bangkok on April 10, last year does not appear to have been shot by security forces, a reversal from preliminary findings that raised immediate questions about the inquiry. (AP Photo/Reuters, FILE) NO SALES, EDITORIAL USE ONLYAP - Thailand's Department of Special Investigation said Monday that a Reuters cameraman killed during political protests in Bangkok last year does not appear to have been shot by security forces, a reversal from preliminary findings that raised immediate questions about the inquiry.