There was, however, a small decrease in the number of major incidents (resulting in three or more fatalities), from 28 in 2009, to 23 in 2010. Prominent among the major incidents of 2010 were:
September 3: At least 65 persons were killed while over 191 were injured after a suicide bomber blew himself up amidst participants of a rally held to mark the al-Quds Day [an international day of solidarity with the Palestinian people] in Quetta.
August 14: Six Punjabi speaking persons were shot dead by assailants riding a motorcycle, when they were going home from work in the Khilji Colony of Quetta.
Unidentified assailants singled out Punjabi passengers travelling on a bus, killing 10 and injuring five others near Quetta.
June 15: Seven persons, including a tribal elder, were shot dead and two persons were injured, when their vehicle was ambushed on the RCD Highway in the Surab tehsil (revenue unit) of Kalat district.
April 16: A suicide bomber blew himself up in an attack inside the Civil Hospital in Quetta, the provincial capital, killing 11 persons and injuring 35.
The insurgents, moreover, retained capabilities to carry out acts of sabotage on a daily basis across the province. Acts of violence were, crucially, not restricted to a few areas, but occurred in practically every one of the 26 districts of the province, including capital Quetta . Quetta continues to witness high levels of violence, both by Islamist extremists and Baloch nationalists. There were 101 militancy-related incidents in Quetta during 2010, as against 73 in 2009, 81 in 2008, 72 in 2007, 75 in 2006, 61 in 2005, 51 in 2004 and 32 in 2003.
One principal stream of violence is engineered by the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP)-Afghan Taliban-al Qaeda combine, which continues to disrupt NATO supply lines to Afghanistan, which pass through Balochistan. Attacks in Balochistan on oil tankers and trucks ferrying NATO supplies to Afghanistan rose sharply from 14 in 2009 to 66 in 2010. 12 persons lost their lives in these attacks, while 32 suffered injuries. Media reports on January 1, 2011, indicated that at least 139 oil tanker and containers had been destroyed in Balochistan through 2010. In one such attack, unidentified militants set ablaze more than 20 NATO supply trucks heading for Afghanistan near the Akhtarabad terminal in Quetta in the morning of October 6, 2010. Claiming responsibility, TTP spokesman Azam Tariq said that its cadres carried out an arson attack on NATO tankers in Pakistan as revenge against a scaled-up US drone strike campaign in the country’s northwest. On October 9, 2010, when nearly 30 tankers were set ablaze in the Bolan district, TTP warned, "We accept responsibility for the attacks on the NATO supply trucks and tankers. We will continue such attacks until the drone strikes are stopped."
Amidst growing attacks on NATO convoys and apprehensions regarding the activities of the Afghan Taliban’s Quetta Shura, Western media reports in November 2010 indicated that the United States was seeking to expand the areas inside Balochistan where Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) drones could operate. US officials were said to be eyeing areas surrounding Quetta, where the Taliban leadership was believed to be hiding. However, on December 11, 2010, Balochistan Frontier Corps (FC) Inspector General, Major General Ubaidullah Khan, claimed that no TTP or Quetta Shura Taliban existed in any part of the province, indicating continuing collusion between the Pakistani Army and establishment and the Afghan Taliban, and particularly the Quetta Shura, which is widely believed to operate under the protection of Pakistan’s Inter Services Intelligence.
The TTP has, moreover, launched repeated suicide attacks against government establishments in retaliation against US drone attacks, and Pakistani authorities are consequently trying their level best to keep the US drones out of Balochistan, in order to appease the extremists. Significantly, the rebels targeted the Chief Minister (CM) of Balochistan, Nawab Aslam Raisani, in a suicide attack on December 7, when he narrowly escaped the assassination attempt at a railway crossing at Saryab Pattak in Quetta. Claiming responsibility for the attack, the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi al-Alami spokesperson, who introduced himself as Abdullah Jhangvi, phoned the Quetta Press Club from an unspecified location and vowed to carry out such attacks in the future as well.
Meanwhile, Islamabad continues to direct the bulk of its initiatives against the Baloch nationalist rebels. Seeking to crush nationalist rebellion, the federal government assigned police powers to the FC, a paramilitary force. Federal minister of the interior, Rehman Malik, on September 8, 2010, announced that the federal government had given the Chief Minister (CM) of Balochistan, Nawab Aslam Raisani, the authority to award police powers to the FC to tackle the ‘law and order situation’ in the province. He, however, qualified that all raids and actions against militants would be led by the police. Malik also announced that every organisation whose name bears the word "liberation" or "lashkar" in Balochistan was banned from the date of his announcement, and their accounts were frozen. These organisations prominently included the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), Baloch Liberation Front (BLF), Baloch Republican Army (BRP), Lashkar-e-Balochistan (LB) and Baloch Mussalah Difa Organisation (BMDO). He also warned that the government would take ‘tougher action’, if necessary, to control the escalating violence and unrest in Balochistan.
Later, on November 24, 2010, the CM ruled out any possibilities of talks with Baloch militants, declaring that the ‘public’ had not given him a mandate for that purpose. This reflected a dramatic shift from the position articulated by the CM and the Balochistan governor, Nawab Zulfiqar Ali Magsi, on October 29. 2010, when they offered to engage in dialogue with ‘angry Baloch elements’, especially the insurgents, and pledged to protect their legitimate rights.
At the other end of Islamabad’s ‘carrot and stick’ policy, in a joint sitting of Parliament on November 24, 2010, the federal government announced a ‘five-tier multi-dimensional special package’ for Balochistan, combining political, administrative and economic initiatives. The package, named Aghaz-e-Haqooq-e-Balochistan (beginning of the rights of Balochistan), was presented by the Pakistan People’s Party Senator, Mian Raza Rabbani, who heads the seven-member Parliamentary Committee, which finalised the package in consultation with the political leadership in Parliament and other ‘stakeholders’. The five-tier package envisages the withdrawal of the Army from Sui, and its replacement by the FC; a fact-finding commission, headed by a retired judge of the Supreme Court/High Court, to probe into the death of Nawab Akbar Bugti [August 26, 2006]; inquiry by the superior judiciary into the murder of Baloch political workers, including Ghulam Muhammad Baloch [April 9, 2009], Lala Munir [May 25, 2010], and targeted killings in the province.
Exiled Baloch leaders, however, summarily rejected the ‘package’ on the grounds that it failed to address their core problems. Significantly, Talal Bugti, the late Nawab Akbar Bugti’s son and President of the Jamhoori Watan Party, alleged that the package had been prepared by ‘invisible forces’ and not by Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani’s team or a Parliamentary Committee. "Our stand remains unchanged that the federating units must be treated as per the 1940 Pakistan Resolution," he declared, adding, "We don’t believe in dialogue anymore, as it has been unproductive." Hyrbyair Marri, the London-based leader of the Marri tribe, while opposing any compromise with the government, called the package a "mockery and a cruel joke" on the people of Balochistan, claimed it fell far short of Baloch expectations, and that it was only an exercise in buying more time.
Further, the National Assembly Standing Committee (NASC) on Inter-Provincial Coordination on January 10, 2011, expressed dissatisfaction over the pace of implementation of the packages for Balochistan, observing that a lot of work had been done on paper and nothing on the ground. The NASC was, however, informed that, out of 61 proposals in the package, 15 had been ‘fully implemented’, 12 were in the process of being implemented while 34 proposals were in the ‘middle stages’ of implementation.
Balochistan is rich in mineral wealth, but remains poor because of Islamabad's relentless exploitation, neglect and excesses. Jumma Khan Marri, president of the Baloch Unity Organisation, thus observed: