| If Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani does not understand the politics of Balochistan then he cannot accurately assess the magnitude of his success notched on Saturday by meeting with veteran Baloch nationalist leader Sardar Attaullah Mengal. In fact, Mengal’s willingness to meet the head of Pakistani government is a much bigger progress than even the presentation of Aghaz-e-Haqooq-e-Balochistan Package which was unveiled in November last year.
Irrespective of Sardar Mengal’s contributions, if any, to the ongoing armed struggle in Balochistan, the very meeting on Saturday has staggered everyone in Balochistan. Preparation of development or constitutional packages for Balochistan has not been the biggest problem the government has faced since the outset to resolve the Balochistan conflict. In fact, it has been the utter unwillingness of seasoned Baloch nationalist leaders to meet any high-ranking official of the government of Pakistan.
It is premature to say that the meeting between Gilani and Mengal is going to entirely normalize the situation in Balochistan but no word except “extraordinary’ suffices to describe it. This is a very crucial meeting for the government for its reconciliatory process initiated across the country, including Balochistan. Likewise, this meeting is very significant for the future of the ongoing Baloch resistance movement. With the younger lot of Balochs supporting the armed struggle and championing the cause of an independent Balochistan who would say Sardar Mengal is insignificant in the armed movement, one could still argue that the meeting at least gives a clear sense of what the Balochistan National Party (BNP) is thinking about its future plans.
Along with Nawab Khair Baksh Marri, Sardar Attaullah is the most important living Baloch leader. He was elected as the first chief minister of Balochistan in 1970s. His National Awami Party (NAP) government is known in the Baloch history as the only government fully owned and revered by the Baloch people. When Mengal’s government was undemocratically removed by Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto and a military operation was carried out by the Pakistan army against unarmed Balochs, that phase gave impetuous to the Baloch movement. Later on, his son and the president of Balochistan National Party (BNP), Sardar Akhtar Mengal, also served as the chief minister of Balochistan. The junior Mengal was immured during Musharraf’s dictatorial regime for more than one year. He was released only after the exit of Pervez Musharraf and induction of the PPP government.
One still does not know with certainty who actually arranged this meeting between the elderly Baloch leader and the prime minister of Pakistan. After all, Sardar Mengal had grown so disillusioned with Islamabad’s policies that he had disconnected all contacts with the center and its leaders. During Musharraf’s regime, he had gone to the extent of extending so much support to the Baloch armed struggle that he told Lahore-based The Friday Times, “I wish I were the BLA chief”. Likewise, he told the same news magazine days after the killing of Nawab Akbar Bugti that days for fighting political battles were over. Some times back at the outset of this year, President Asif Ali Zardari, during a visit to Karachi, had reportedly expressed his desire to meet Sardar Mengal but the Baloch leader had politely declined the offer saying that he did not see any progress on the part of the government towards the situation in Balochistan which could be taken as a pretext to meet the President of Pakistan.
Later on, Chief Minister of Balochistan Nawab Mohammad Aslam Raisani had |