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Should Baloch support construction of US consulate in Balochistan?




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    NEWS & OTHER LANG. NEWS

 08.02.2012

 Graphic details: Killing of Brahumdagh Bugti’s sister and niece in Karachi on 31st January

Brahamdagh Bugti’s sister Zamur Bugti (34), and 13-year old daughter, Jaana Domki were visiting the house of Zamur’s maternal uncle after attending a wedding ce...


 07.02.2012

 Gas line, railway track blown up, target killing claims two lives in Naushki Security official injured in landmine blast in Dera Bugti

QUETTA: Unidentified people exploded three gas pipelines in Dera Bugti while a railway track was also blown up in Dera Murad Jamali on Monday. Explosives were f...


 03.02.2012

 Gas pipeline blown up in Dera Bugti

QUETTA: Unidentified people blew up an 8-inch diameter gas pipeline in Pirkoh area of Dera Bugti on Thursday. According to official sources, unidentified miscre...


 02.02.2012

 Balochistan: BLA kills 15 soldiers near Quetta

* Militants attack four FC checkposts near Margat coalmine* Forces launch massive search, recover seven bodiesBy Mohammad Zafar QUETTA: At least 15 personnel of...


 31.01.2012

 Balochistan lawmaker’s wife, daughter assassinated

Karachi: At least seven persons, including wife and daughter of a Balochistan Assembly lawmaker, were shot dead in a fresh outbreak of violence here. The w...


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OPINIONS    

Full Frame: Lost in Balochistan

23.04.2010

By Marc Wattrelot — Special to GlobalPost
Published: April 23, 2010 07:20 ET

Full Frame features photo essays and conversations with photographers in the field.

Balochistan extends over 350,000 square kilomaters (about the size of Germany) and is the largest province in the Pakistan Federation. About 7 million people live in Balochistan and the population comprises Iranians, Pakistanis and Afghanis. Balochistan is among the richest provinces in Pakistan, with valuable natural resources in gold, cobalt and gas. But its people are the poorest, suffering for decades under the Pakistani government. The Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) seeks to address this economic discrimination. The armed group's resistance regularly makes headlines in the Pakistani national press.


Balochis cultivate a resentment toward centralized power, accusing the government of delaying provincial development while at the same time plundering Balochistan's rich resources. The BLA was most active starting in 2006 when a number of Balochi political leaders were killed. The BLA continues to target the Pakistani army, which it views as an occupying imperialist force.

For me photography is a way to meet people. It’s a tool to see and listen better. The photographic process is a passage to reveal another face of the truth. What fascinates me is that a photograph is taken in less than a second but it can take months to prepare. I like the idea of staying long, watching, waiting for the good light and learning things. In some ways my camera allows me to live with people, to share with them even if their thinking is far from conventional.

Balochistan is in turmoil. This vast mountainous desert at the crossroad of Iran and the Indian subcontinent share values with both cultural spheres but Balochis cultivate an original tribal culture. My time photographing in the dry red mountains with Balochis fighters was a powerful experience. I remember my fear before my first meeting with the 40 heavily armed guerrilla fighters, but at this time photographing was a way to keep a certain distance. It soon became an object of interaction and my key to entering the intimacy of the fighters. I remember the sweet light of the early morning after a harsh night with the fighters. I try to avoid any judgment but the Balochis I met were sharing and joking continuously with each other. They were ready to give their lives far from their families for a cause that few people have heard of and without any financial advantages. They were proud and sure about their fight.

About the photographer:

Marc’s work revolves around social issues and identity concerns mostly focusing on unrepresented communities and groups. He began his carrier by photographing the workers at an isolated shipping yard in Pakistan. This work was recognized by the Paris-Match Young Reporter Grant in 2003 and has been shown in Musee des Beaux Arts de Chartres, France.

He graduated from the Sorbonne University, Paris and from Sciences Po, Toulouse where he studied geography, political science and journalism (1999-2005).

Since then, Marc has been working in Pakistan, India, Afghanistan and China. His long-term work “Lost From Balochistan” on Balochistan province in Pakistan won an honorary mention at the 2010 Anthropographia Award. This story, exhibited in Paris and screened at Spain's Gijon Photojournalism Festival 2009, will be published in a book by 2010.

His photographs have appeared mostly in the French press: AFP, Marie Claire, Liberation, Paris Match, Match du Monde, ChinePlus and Figaro Magazine.

Marc Wattrelot is a 30 years old and based in New Delhi, India.

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/full-frame/100408/photos-balochistan

« Previous  |  Next »

• 22.04.2010 - The Supreme Court no longer talks of the missing persons
• 21.04.2010 - Self-determination of Balochistan: Looking Back and Looking Forward
• 18.04.2010 - Balochistan – The other side of the story
• 16.04.2010 - Editorial: Acidifying two little sisters
• 15.04.2010 - Peter Tatchell: The people of Baluchistan have a right to self-determination

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 -  Sanaullah Baloch

 07.01 - Judiciary, parliament silent on Baloch issues
 25.11 - Exploitation of Mineral Wealth
 24.10 - From Chile to Chagai
 26.09 - The Baloch agony in Pakistan
 26.08 - The great Baloch martyr

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 14.04 - A Message to Honorable Leaders of the Baloch "Nation"
 13.11 - A Voice of a Baloch
 27.09 - Two Women’s Tragedies in Balochistan: Honor Killing and Rape.
 25.08 - Self-determination of Balochistan: Looking Back and Looking Forward
 11.08 - United Nations: It’s Contribution to the Everlasting Balochistan Crisis

 Malik Siraj Akbar
 - ANALYSIS: Strategic mess

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