In early
2012, brothers
Noordin and
Bhawal Mengal decided to make a film about the ongoing human rights crisis in
Balochistan, a large province in south-western
Pakistan. The producers commissioned a
British filmmaker,
David Whitney, to make the film with their help.
After a lengthy development phase, shooting began on the "
The Line of
Freedom" in
September 2012. The cast and crew braved high temperatures in the desert and mountains to shoot this short film at an undisclosed location.
After the production stage, editing commenced in
The UK and the film was completed in late 2012.
The central character of the film is Nasir Dagarzai who was abducted, tortured and murdered by
Pakistani military as part of its "
Kill and
Dump" policy and
Dirty War against
Baloch people.
Balochistan
Info:
Balochistan (literally meaning
Land of the
Baloch) is a mountainous and arid desert region situated at the tri-juncture of the
Middle East,
South Asia and
Central Asia. A resource rich province at the mouth of the
Persian Gulf that was once an independent state, Balochistan now straddles across
Iran,
Pakistan and Afghanistan. It is the largest, but most backward, under-developed and strife-torn province of Pakistan.
The secular Baloch people have faced successive dismissals of elected democratic governments by
Islamabad and repeated military operations by the
Pakistan army, which is traditionally and predominantly
Punjabi, in 1948-52, 1958-60, 1962-63, 1973-77, with the most recent military operation beginning in
2005. However, this time
Pakistan misused US-supplied weapons meant to counter the Taliban and turned this arsenal on the Baloch.
Once again a war is raging for the heart and soul of Balochistan, and its victims are usually innocent men, women and children.
Map showing Balochistan location relative to
Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan
The distinguishing feature of this fifth insurgency in Pakistan is its battlefield. It resembles none of the previous, for this time
Pakistan's military and proxy forces wage their efforts quite literally on the bodies of Balochistan's youth and activists. Unable to quell the movement or capture or eliminate its leaders, armed forces and intelligence agencies take out their frustration on soft and easily accessible targets—students, teachers, intellectuals, lawyers, political and human rights activists.
Enforced disappearances are endemic.
Young and old go missing for months or years on end and in hundreds of cases, their bullet-riddled, tortured and often unrecognizable bodies turn up on roadsides. This practice has been called Pakistan's 'kill and dump' policy and both
Human Rights Watch and
Amnesty International have provided documentation of numerous cases.
High levels of intimidation, harassment, arrest and torture are carried out against opposition supporters.
Peaceful protestors have been suppressed, political representatives have been detained unlawfully, and freedom of expression and assembly is totally restricted for the Baloch. However, Pro-Taliban
Pashtun groups that despise Baloch nationalists have complete freedom to promote their ideology with the tacit support of Pakistan's intelligence agencies.
This unofficial practice is but one in a long string of failed official policies towards this provincial member of the Pakistan federation.
Following the British division of
India and the creation of Pakistan in
1947, Balochistan—then referred to as
Kalat—was also recognized as an independent state, news of which was reported even in the
New York Times. Pakistan, however, spent the subsequent year cajoling some Baloch tribal chiefs, making backroom deals and prying away Balochistan's territory. After the upper and lower houses of the Baloch parliament unanimously rejected Pakistan's proposal, Pakistan forced Balochistan's accession at gunpoint on the
27th March, 1948, almost doubling Pakistan's landmass.
This landmass proved rich in minerals, oil and gas, but the wealth derived from these resources has never been equitably distributed to the people of Balochistan. Baloch gas has fueled Pakistan's most populous and dominant province of
Punjab since
1953, but reaches only a handful of selected areas of Balochistan. While the first
Baloch insurgency led by
Abdul Karim Baloch in 1948 was sparked by the issue of political sovereignty, subsequent insurgencies embraced issues of development, rights to resources and autonomy. With the military's killings of revered Baloch leaders
Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti in
2006 and
Balach Marri in
2007, however, grievances evolved from talk of 'divorce' into a full-blown demand for independence on the part of the political groups and many within the general population
For Info: thelineoffreedom.com/balochistan-info
.asp
- published: 16 Nov 2013
- views: 69290