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Presented by Nasser Boladai, Spokesman of Balochistan Peoples Party,
in the United States Congress in Washington on 30th of May
2006
Ladies and gentlemen, first of all I would like to thank and express
my deepest gratitude to the organiser of this conference, the Kurdish
National Congress of North America.
I am
glad to be here in the Congress of a nation whose founding fathers
fought for the sovereignty and freedom of their nation and are an
inspiration to oppressed peoples all over the world to fight for
freedom and justice. Today, the Senate of the United State is symbol
of American federalism.
I am
speaking here as the representative of Balochistan Peoples Party (BPP),
which is a Republican and Democratic Party struggling to achieve
sovereignty for the Baloch people within a secular federal and
democratic Republic in Iran. More than three million Baloch living in
Iran are being treated as third-class citizens because of ethnic and
religious differences with Persian and Shi’a sect of Islam. Under the
previous monarchist and the current Islamic regimes of Iran, the
Baloch people have been deprived of cultural, social, economic, and
other fundamental human rights.
Balochistan, “the country of the Baloch”
is presently subjugated by three countries of Afghanistan, Iran, and
Pakistan. The country is strategically situated at the eastern flank
of the Middle East, linking the Central Asian states with the Indian
subcontinent and the Indian Ocean. It posses the Northern part of Gulf
and Arab Sea from the strait of the Hormose to Karachi.
The
Indian government and Pakistan and Iran are trying to build a pipeline
to take Iranian gas, which in large part belongs to Baloch, to
Pakistan and to India. At same time China is building a deep seaport
in Gwadar in the Eastern Balochistan, and India has started the
construction of a road to link Afghanistan to Chabhar, a port City in
Western Balochistan. Balochistan will become a cross road for
pipeline serving the energy need of the region and world. All these
activities are being carried out without consulting the Baloch
people. In all these projects, the Baloch people have been sidelined
in jobs and other benefits. Only India has expressed that Baloch
should be consulted before development starts, but there are no signs
that the parties are contacting Baloch popular representatives.
Since
1928 that Western Part of Balochistan was annexed by Iranian forces.
The politics of the Iranian regimes in Balochistan are characterised
by human rights abuses.
Some
significant consequences of the Iranian regimes chauvinistic policies
are:
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The use of the Balochi language is
forbidden in public places, and Baloch children are deprived of
using their mother tongue as the medium of instruction at schools.
The Iranian government does not allow any kind of press freedom in
Balochistan
-
Ethnicity and religion are systematically and practically used as
barriers to Baloch students entering into higher education systems.
-
The
policy of keeping the Baloch backward has resulted in the lack of
job opportunities and in the impoverishment of the entire
population. The high-ranking authorities in Balochistan are Shi'a
and non-Baloch, including the majority of ordinary governmental
officers and clerks employed from the other parts of Iran and
brought into Balochistan.
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Successive Iranian governments have been engaged in demographic
manipulations to systematically reduce the Baloch people to a
minority in their own homeland. Furthermore, among the many
repressive policies is the destruction of the homes of poor Baloch
people and their displacement. This is done in order to provide the
best located land to the non-Baloch, specifically to Security
Forces, which are brought in from other parts of Iran to carry out
the regime’s chauvinistic policies. Government policy has been based
on facilitating easy access to non-Baloch people to purchase land at
a cheap price and set up businesses.
The current situation: the
regime’s atrocities in Balochistan
The
policies of the Iranian Government in Balochistan are characterised by
human rights abuse. They have distorted the political, economical, and
cultural development of Balochistan and insulted the human dignity of
Baloch people. Some specific cases of human right violation and
repressive policies of the Iranian regimes are:
1
In the first week of January 2006 two young students driving a car in
the city of
Raask
in Balochistan were ordered to stop by so-called security forces and
failed to observe the security forces’ stop sign. The security forces
then chased them while shooting at them in crowded area. During this
shooting the two young men in the car and another bypassing person
were killed, and, in addition, another bystander was
injured.
After seeing this crime Baloch people attacked the main police
station, and the security forces ran away. When the situation got out
of the hand, the city Mayor and elders of the city intervened and the
situation returned to normal. However, up until now, none of the
perpetrators have been prosecuted.
2
On the 22 of January 2006, in Provincial Capital Dozaap (Zahedan)
three youngsters (Abdullah Nutizhai age 15 years, Ruhala Nutizhi age
16 years, and Masoud Shabaksh age 18 years) were riding on a motorbike
to visit a sick cousin in hospital. The regime’s security forces
approached them from behind, deliberately riding towards the
motorbike. When these youngsters fell to the ground the security
forces began to shoot them while grabbing their half dead bodies and
beating them with the stock of gun. As a result, two of them (Abdullah
Nutizhai and Masoud Shabaksh) were killed, and Ruhala Nutizhi
sustained severe injuries and was admitted to hospital. Again, no one
has been prosecuted.
3
On
Monday, the 10th of April 2006, three Baloch clerics, Molavi
Nea'matulla Mirbalochzahi, Molavi Abdul Hakim Gamshadzahi, Molavi
Abdullah Narooi, and their two associates were killed in a mysterious
car accident.
The suppposed accident happened in a way that the target car
travelling from Zahedan (provincial capital) was hit by an empty,
unmarked bus, which was occupied only by its driver and his assistant
travelling from Kerman, 500 kilometres from Zahedan.
Having previously experienced this way of killing opponents by the
Iranian regime countless times over the past decade, the Baloch people
are questioning this accident and are holding the Iranian Intelligence
services responsible for the suspicious killing.
4
One of most despicable crimes by Iranian regime was the killing of two
young Baloch men who were working as gasoline sellers on the road
between Zahedan and Bam, and who were involved in an car accident. A
group called “Marsad” meaning “Ambuscade or Ambush” were first to
arrive at the scene. After they checked the injured identities and saw
that they were ethnically Baloch and Sunni, instead of helping them,
the Marsad group shot the men on the spot. Marsad is paramilitary
group that work under direct order of Iranian supreme leader Mr
Khamenaie.
Since
the Iranian occupation of Balochistan in 1928, the Baloch people have
resisted the Persian domination in many ways including a low-intensity
armed resistance.
The
increase in human right violations, collective punishment of Baloch
civilians, and increased militarization of Baloch areas has lead to
intensification of the armed resistance against the Iranian regime,
especially in the past three months.
The
armed resistance movement in Western Balochistan is a native
phenomenon with a history of over 70 years against successive Iranian
government and the current religious government.
The
Iranian regime, due to its oppressive character, is accusing the
Baloch people of cooperation with United State and Great Britain,
instead of employing negotiations and other peaceful means to end the
resistance.
On
the 15th of May in 2006, the regime used this accusation to
launch a military operation in a large area in Northern and Southern
parts of Zahedan, Balochistans provincial capital. During these
operations no encounters between Baloch resistance forces and Iranian
army have taken place.
The
regimes forces using Helicopter gunship have bombed civilian areas
resulting in the deaths of innocent Baloch people in both villages and
the mountains. More than 20 civilians have been killed with many more
injured, and the people have also suffered enormous damages to their
property.
In
the cities, many young men have been arrested, accused of supporting
the Baloch Armed Resistance Forces.
The
Iranian regime treats Baloch people as third class citizens,
discriminating against them based on religion and ethnic group, yet
the same regime’s president, Mr Ahmedinezhad, spoke in Zahedan earlier
this year defending Palestine’s national right and irresponsibly
called for Israel to be wiped out of the world map. So, while speaks
for one people’s right to their homeland, he oppresses the Baloch
people who want to keep their own ancestral lands and culture.
The
Iranian regime is also a strong backer of international terrorism and
extremist groups. Currently, it is trying to arm itself with nuclear
weapons and other weapons of mass destruction. By arming itself, this
theocratic, ideological regime hopes to dominate Middle East and to
globally spread its brand of fanatical Islam.
So,
this regime not only threatens the well-being and welfare of Iranian
people but it presents a great danger to the region and the entire
world as well.
Change of this regime that is armed with a fanatic ideology and
financed by oil money requires a strong opposition that enjoys popular
support inside the country and international backing.
The
Congress of Nationalities for a Federal Iran, which presently consists
of political parties belonging to oppressed nationalities in Iran and
which enjoys popular support inside Iran, is a strong part of the
opposition.
The
Congress of Nationalities is trying to strengthen itself by including
other organisations and parties that struggle for federal structure
based on parity of constituent parts in Iran.
The
Balochistan Peoples Party is working with other parties and
organisations in the Congress of Nationalities for a Federal Iran to
build a stronger opposition to the current regime and to establish a
democratic, secular, federal government in Iran. And it is ready to
work and cooperate with other organisations and parties to achieve
this aim before it is too late and before this fanatic regime arms
itself with nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction. Under
nuclear protection this regime will spread and support international
terrorism and extremism and will suppresses its own people.
Contact information:
Balochistan Peoples Party
P.O.
Box 13022
103
01 Stockholm
Sweden
www.balochpeople.org
e-mail:
nasser.boladai@iranfederal.org
Telephone: + 46 739 34 37 24
Fax:
+ 46 8 43 75 97 37
APPENDIX
An Introduction to
Balochistan history
Balochistan, “the country of the
Baloch,” is presently subjugated by three countries of Afghanistan,
Iran, and Pakistan. The country, strategically situated at the eastern
flank of the Middle East, links the Central Asian states with the
Indian subcontinent and the Indian Ocean.
Balochistan has existed as a
geographical area inhabited by a closely related people for thousands
of years. It has even existed in recent times as a modern national
state. Historically, Baloch had independent principalities within a
Baloch national framework. For example, the independent state of
Kalat from 1947 to 1948 was the last one. Kalat was occupied and
annexed by Pakistan in 1948. However, Kalat governed over eastern
Balochistan directly or indirectly until 1948.
But, by the mid-1900s,
the structure of independent nationalities ceased to exist.
In
1849, an Iranian army defeated Baloch forces in Kerman and captured
Bumpur. The Baloch political status changed radically in later
decades, when, in the 19th century, the British and Persian
Empires divided Balochistan into spheres of influences between the
British Empire in India and the Persian Kingdom.
The
Baloch people in Western Balochistan have been in constant revolt
against the domination by and the chauvinistic policy of Iranian
governments. The revolt of Jask (1873), of Sarhad (1888), and the
general uprising in 1889 resulted in a scorched-earth policy by
Iranian forces in 1889 aimed at suppressing Baloch rebellion. A major
uprising under Baloch chieftain Sardar Hussein Narui in 1896 prompted
a joint Anglo-Persian expeditionary force to crush the resistance. The
resistance was crushed after two years and Chief Narui was arrested.
At
the beginning of the twentieth century, Bahram Khan gained control of
nearly the entire central and southern region of Western Balochistan,
ending the occupation by Iranian forces. In 1916, the British
recognized him as the effective ruler of Western Balochistan. His
nephew, Mir Dost Mohamed succeeded Mir Bahram Khan. In 1928, the
Iranian forces began an operation against Mir Dost Mohamed. Skirmishes
continued for seven months and ended in the victory of Iranian forces
over the Baloch. Dost Mohammad Khan went to Tehran for negotiations
but was arrested and executed in Tehran. Thus, Western Balochistan was
finally annexed by the Persian Empire. The politics of the Iranian
Government in Balochistan are characterised by human rights abuses.
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