
BALOCH STUDENTS ORGANIZATION
AN OVERVIEW OF BALOCH STUDENTS ORGANIZATION
B S O
AN OVERVIEW OF BALOCH STUDENTS ORGANIZATION:
The Baloch Students Organization had played an appreciable role in Baloch
politics. As early as 1968,
It was in the mainstream of national politics, the BSO approach to national
issues and its stand on matters concerning Balochistan. About the role of the
students BSO leader ship considered that students movement an integral part of
the democratic struggle in the country. 'The students of the smaller provinces
have given a lead in the struggle for provincial autonomy and recognition of
their languages as national languages.' the BSO think tank, mindful of the
riches of Balochistan being exploited by other provinces while the Baloch were
being denied their share, they claimed openly that income from natural
resources in Balochistan was pocketed by foreign and internal monopolies. 'Even
employment in Sui Gas installations is reserved for people from outside
Balochistan.
The determination of Baloch youth to follow the course chalked out by their
leaders to achieve a rightful place for their people. They demanded the
inalienable right of sovereignty for the subject nationalities of Pakistan.
The BS0 was in the vanguard of the nationalist movement launched by the NAP
(National Awami Party) and its Baloch leaders. The NAP greatly valued the
organization and its spirited youth in the struggle. In their speeches before
BS0 gatherings they would asks them to work selflessly in the interest of
their people. The BS0 workers, addressed by Mir Ghous Bakhsh Bizenjo and other
Baloch leaders on 18th March 1969 in Karachi, were asked to be ''true to their
great traditions'. Sardar Ataullah Mengal and Nawab Bugti in their speeches
demanded national right of self-determination for the people of Balochistan.
Addressing the BS0 workers at Mastung in 1970, Sardar Mengal praised the
students for their historic role in. achieving provincial status for
Balochistan.
The Baloch students were given highest consideration by the NAP. The BSO
leaders were taken into confidence in arriving at major policy decisions. One
of its leaders, Dr. Abdul Hai, was nominated to contest the National Assembly
on the NAP ticket. He defeated Prince Yahya, the son of Ahmed Yar Khan, the
ex—ruler of Kalat. The selection of Dr. Abdul Hal was recognition of BS0
sacrifices and their appreciable role in the Baloch political movement.
Since its inception in 1967, the BSO worked closely with the National Awami
Party. But the students were by no means mere camp followers. They were a
vocal faction in the party. In spite of its close association with the NAP,
the BS0 retained an independent posture and acted with more fervor than
expected from a students' body. The NAP rapprochement with the Peoples Party
in 1972 was severely opposed by a strong faction in the BSO because of
inadequate guarantees of provincial autonomy in the PPP sponsored constitution
The government and many other elements outside the government started
manipulating the organization and courting its leaders in order not only to
confuse the rank and file of the BS0 but also to secure an estrangement with
its main, political ally, the National Awami Party, and its successors, the
NDP and then The Pakistan National Party. The division in the BSO earlier war
also-aimed at weakening the Baloch movement but since the breakaway faction
did not come up to their expectations, efforts were made to penetrate the main
organization. The BS0's influence in political circles made some of its
leaders regard themselves as indispensable. Some of the BS0 top brass believed
that the students could provide an alternative leadership to the people. Some
muhajir ideologues and pseudo-communists did play a despicable role in
confusing the minds of some of the ambitious students leaders.
In all developing countries the role of the students as agitators and as
pressure group is always recognized. Even in countries like France the
students played a significantly unexpected role in the downfall of General
Charles de Gaulle in 1968. Such a role of the student's organization is always
acknowledged in Third—World countries but nowhere have such organizations
superceded the political parties. A similar pattern was discernible in the
BSO's relations with the NAP. Both organizations worked in unison to achieve
the common goal of bringing greater benefits to the people. As mentioned
earlier, many elements were at work in the student groups including government
groomed intelligentsia and non- Baloch ideologues often with dubious
connections.
Calling off the armed struggle in Balochistan was the culmination of relations
between the BS0 and the NAP. The BSO threw its weight into the war and its
chairman, Khair Jan , Abdul Nabi Bangulzi and other important members were
actively involved in the movement. Many more suffered in jails.
.
The BSO stand opposing the end of hostilities was however vindicated by later
events, which showed that the Baloch politicians were clearly mistaken about
government intentions. The great sacrifices of the people achieved nothing.
The struggle had not only added further miseries to the people's burden but
also brought a defeatist psychosis on the nation. At first, the BSO was
hesitant in its opposition. They were selective in their campaign. The
students thought that Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri, because of his Maoist leanings,
was perhaps closer to them. During the conflict Khair Bakhsh's relations with
certain Maoist elements from the Panjab and Sind, who wanted a struggle for
the 'people's liberation to start from Balochistan, made him the only hope and
gave the impressionthat he was opposed to the calling off of war. When the
Baloch leaders arrived in Quetta after their release, the BSO received them
and showed considerable enthusiasm towards Nawab Khair Bakhsh and Mir Sher
Mahmad Marri. The students, under the leadership of Aslam Kurd, took these
leaders in a procession to the Jinnah Road office of the organization, where
they talked to BSO workers. But the students were soon disheartened when Khair
Bakhsh Marri started negotiations with government. The BSO now openly
criticized the leadership. This suited not only the government whose agencies
for many years have been cultivating many of the student activists in the
organization but a lot of other extremists in the country and an influential
faction in the provincial beaurocracy;
The BSO did not call off the struggle officially though their members could
not do anything more than issue strongly worded statements against the Baloch
politicians, putting them in the same category as the exploitative class in
the country. The BSO annual report referred to earlier put the NAP and its
Baloch leadership at par with other right-wing political parties in the
country. The report said that by aligning themselves with the reactionary and
conservative political grouping, the PNA (Pakistan National Alliance), the NAP
had exposed itself as an anti-people organization. Now the BSO and the
government by implication were co-operating with each other in maligning the
National Awami Party and its successor, the National Party. The
government-controlled media carried the BSO statements against the Baloch
leadership prominently. The elements which masterminded the rift between the
BSO and the Baloch politicians also encouraged the BSO top brass to make
frequent calls for student agitation on the slightest pretext in order to
heighten the atmosphere and create an air of continued active hostility
between the Baloch and the Pakistan government. When the Baloch students tried
to agitate at the call of their leaders, they found themselves in jails
andtheir leaders in hiding. Without political backing, the BSO, for the first
time since its inception, was reduced to an insignificant faction in
Balochistan politics. They found themselves without direction and without any
support in the masses. While their leaders went into hiding, many of the
members of the organization suffered immensely.
SHAEED HAMID BALOCH
The most significant event in the history of BSO was the execution of one of
its active members, Hameed, on the charge of the attempted murder of one
Colonel Khalfan, a foreign delegate from the Sultanate of Oman, in Turbat in
1979. The 880 opposed the recruitment of Baloch youth into the Omanian army,
which had been fighting a war against the Dhofari dissidents in southern Oman
bordering Aden. The 880 believed that recruitment would earn notoriety for the
Baloch in the eyes of progressive elements throughout the world and weaken the
Baloch nationalist movement in Pakistan. Secondly they saw it as aiming to
pervert the younger elements in societyby offering huge salaries for their
services in a mercenary army. Hameed was trilled by a Special Military Court
and condemned to death. The death sentence was carried out on 11th June 1981
in Mach prison. . Hameed, in his last will before his execution, had appealed
to the students to shun their differences and work united for the great Baloch
cause.
SHEED MAJEED BALOCH
Abdul Majeed Lango, gave his life while trying to kill Prime Minister Zulfiqar
Ali Bhutto with a hand-grenade in Quetta on 12th August 1974.
THE BALOCH STUDENTS ORGANIZATION:
STRUGGLE AND ACHIEVEMENTS