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The Great Tragedy |
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By FAIZ ALNAJDI |
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16 December 1971 is remembered by most Pakistanis as the
fateful day when the country was dismembered by the enemy
machination.
East Pakistan changed its name overnight to become
Bangladesh and over 90,000 of our troops became prisoners of
war in their own
country and later transferred to the prison camps of the
enemy country.
This was a tragic day for all Pakistanis alike, however for
those Urdu speaking Pakistanis or non-Bengalis (also
erroneously termed
as Biharis) left behind in Bangladesh by the surrendering
Pakistan Army, this became the mother of all tragedies. Even
before the
surrender, tragedy had already stricken them when
immediately after the infamous Army Action of March 1971,
the local Bengali
populace, upon planned instigation & insinuation by the
Awami League anti-Pakistan elements, had vented out their
anger by running
a revenge killing campaign of these unarmed defenseless
people. Countless of them were ruthlessly murdered and
dumped in mass
graves throughout the former East Pakistan. These were in no
terms less than a holocaust of the Nazis . All these ghastly
crimes
against these innocent un-armed Urdu speaking Pakistanis are
now part of the history as they are very well documented in
numerous
international documents including the official White Paper
from the government of Pakistan issued on 5th August 1971
and the
Humood-ur-Rehman Commission Report of 1974.
Capitulation of the Pakistani administration there opened
doors of hell for these non-Bengali Pakistanis who became
the specific target
of vengeance and retribution. Hundreds and thousands of them
were once again murdered in cold blood and their bodies
dumped into
open ditches which had become mass graves for these poor
people. Later on, all these mass graves of non-Bengalis were
shamelessly and
craftily used by Sheikh Mujib and his cohorts to show-case
and trump up the false propaganda about this so-called genocide
of the local
Bengalis by the Pakistan army. The truth of the matter is
that genocide of Bengalis had not happened at all. Bundle of
stories vis-à-vis
Pakistan army's rape and genocide against the local Bengalis
were purposely concocted to gain sympathy and to isolate
Pakistan in the
eyes of the international community. For this purpose, mass
graves of the non-Bengali Pakistanis previously murdered by
the anti-Pakistan
elements were used to present them as those of the local
Bengalis in order to implicate the Pakistan army in these
crimes. The facts about
such nefarious & shameless tactics are also very well
documented in the international press including the famous
book "Internment Camps
of Bangladesh" by an American author Mrs. Loraine Mirza.
Unfortunately, the tragedy that began for these Pakistanis,
after surrender, did not simply end here. Soon after
creation of Bangladesh,
the political persecution of these Pakistanis continued and
gained momentum day by day. As a first step, they were
evicted from their
homes to live in squalid shanty camps in the urban sprawls
of Bangladesh. Several government promulgations, in the form
of Presidential
Orders by the prejudiced Bangladeshi government, were issued
which had in fact become instruments to dispossess these
Pakistanis of
their properties and belongings. Presidential Order 1 and 16
of 1972 (Bangladesh Abandoned Property Order) is one such
black order to
quote from. As a result, their properties, businesses &
belongings were confiscated and bank accounts seized, young
men were branded
as traitors & Pakistani collaborators and were incarcerated
for indefinite periods without trial. Those cooped up in the
camps were
confined to these neo-internment camps, not allowed to move
out for any thing including jobs, education, healthcare or
any thing.
In short, they were forced to live like prisoners within the
confines of these shanty camps. This fact can be verified in
many
international publications, one such to quote from is "Blood
and Tears" by Qutub Uddin Aziz.
A ray of hope to end of their miseries and eventual
repatriation to Pakistan emerged when the tripartite
agreement was concluded in
New Delhi in 1973 between Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh.
As per the agreement non-Bengali stranded Pakistanis were to
be
repatriated to Pakistan. During Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali
Bhutto's time, concrete steps were taken to repatriate some
of them. Later
President Zia-ul-Haq stalled their repatriation on the
pretext of paucity of funds. This resulted in founding of
Rabita Trust in 1988.
An agreement was signed by Zia-ul-Haq as President of
Pakistan and Omar Abdullah Al-Naseef, the then Secretary
General of Muslim
World League. Advertisements were floated locally &
internationally to seek & collect funds, land was allocated
for some 40,000
houses in Punjab and one thousand houses were planned to be
built in Punjab to rehabilitate these Pakistanis once they
were
repatriated. Former foreign minister Sartaj Aziz bears a
testimony to all these serious discourse involving Pakistani
government
machinery of the highest level at that time and he can be
approached for its veracity.
As the ill fate would have it, this issue once more received
a setback during Prime Minister Benazir's government due to
political
expediencies. She, however, was reported (daily
Jang-Karachi) to have promised a massive rally in Orangi
Town-Karachi on 15 November
1996 (Orangi Town is where most of the former migrants from
East Pakistan had first found refuge at and it was a
constituency of PPP
leader Afaq Shahid also) to repatriate the stranded
Pakistanis once the Orangi people re-elected Afaq Shahid.
However, that did not
happen and so did not the repatriation.
Then came Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. During his period in
1992, a population census of stranded Pakistanis in
Bangladeshi camps was
carried out jointly by representatives of the governments of
Pakistan and Bangladesh with one representative each from
Rabita Trust and
the stranded Pakistani community. At that time the number
was verified as 238,000. Immediately after this, Pakistani
citizenship/ID papers
were prepared for each of them and are still in the safe
custody of the Rabita Trust office in Dhaka. It is also a
fact that in September
1992, Pakistani High Commission with the help of Rabita
Bangladesh had begun issuing identity cards to stranded
Pakistanis only to be
suspended later for reasons not cited. This fact can also be
verified from the Rabita office in Saudi Arabia. Sequel to
this, on 10 January
1993 Nawaz Sharif's government did however keep the promise
and brought home some 325 families and housed them in the
accommodations
exclusively built for them in Mian Chunno-Punjab. This
operation was also later halted on the pretext of fund
constraints. And, that was the
last batch brought home and ever since these Pakistanis are
waiting peacefully to be repatriated to Pakistan. Their
sufferings in silence can
not be described in words.
Lot of water has flown under the bridges since they were
first evicted from their homes and cooped up in the
ghetto-like camps. In between
these periods, old have perished with unfulfilled dreams of
repatriation to Pakistan. The young have grown old with
amassed hopelessness and
dejection. And, what to talk about the young ones; they
frolic in the dirt of the squalid camps oblivion of the
torture that their elders have
been enduring since long. In the meanwhile, Al-haj Nasim
Khan the long-standing leader of the stranded Pakistanis
also passed away unsung
on 28 August 2005; himself waiting in vain until his death
to be repatriated to Pakistan. His last meeting with any
Pakistani leader of
importance was President Musharraf who he had met in Dhaka on
30 July 2002. In the same meeting Musharraf had made a
promise to him to
resolve this issue of repatriation soon and is reported to
have said to them, "leave this task to me", which he had in
fact repeated three times
in front of a number of leaders of the stranded Pakistanis
who had accompanied late Al-haj Nasim Khan . Alas, he also
forgot his promise.
The result is that even after passage of 35 years, these
patriotic Pakistanis are still waiting to be repatriated to
Pakistan. They continue to
endure all sorts of subjugation, discrimination and
humiliation at the hands of both people and the government
of Bangladesh- all in the name
of being Pakistani collaborators. Their dilapidated shanty
camps are often torched by arsonists who are mercenaries of
the local land
grabbing mafia. Water and electricity supplies to their
camps are often cut without notice. Access to jobs, health
and education are denied to
them because they are not Bangladeshi nationals. Their daily
ration supply of meager quantity from Bangladeshi relief
agency also remained
suspended since past one year. In short their safety,
security, and subsistence remain under constant threat from
both the local Bengali
populace and the government who look down upon them as
Pakistani traitors. They have been carrying this stigma of
being Pakistani
collaborators since all these years - all in the hope of
finally making to Pakistan some day. What a deception and
what a tragedy indeed!!
On the other hand, the Pakistani government continues to
dilly-dally on the issue; accepting them as Pakistanis at
one time and issuing statements
to the contrary at another. In short, Pakistani policy
vis-à-vis this issue has never remained straight. Lip
service goes on even at the highest level
of the government. Promises after promise are made yet
virtually nothing is done about it. Pakistani politicians
are no different. The religious
parties - the champions of pan-Islamism - have no time &
resource for them as they have too much to worry about
Kashmir, Afghanistan & beyond.
They are often seen visiting Arab & European capitals but
have never cared to visit their Muslim Pakistani brothers &
sisters in these camps. PPP
is shackled by political expediency as they fear
antagonizing Sindhis. MQM was the arch advocate but also
appears to have put the issue on the
back-burner at least for now. Late Al-haj Nasim Khan is
partly to blame as he, at the behest of Jamat-e-Islami, had
earlier engaged himself
unnecessarily in smear campaign against MQM Chief which
obviously did not bode well with them. This was one reason
with MQM; political
expediency remains the other. However, according to MQM they
remain committed to the cause. Senator Babar Ghouri's
meeting with stranded
Pakistanis leadership in Dacca on 13 Nov-005 is a testimony
to this fact. Muslim League of Nawaz Sharif has a slightly
better record as, although
too little too late, they in fact tried what they had
promised. However, Senator Mushahid Hussain, the Secretary
General of PML is another case.
He had once lived in Dacca during the 1971 period (he
studied in Dacca Notre Dame College) and is fully aware of
this tragedy. He didn't voice
not once for their repatriation to Pakistan. While many
writers, in Pakistan and abroad, have written and are still
writing on the issue, he being
a writer himself has even chickened out on this front as
well. His indifference towards their cause is utterly
despicable. Even Sattar Edhi who
remains a champion of the underdogs worldwide, has traveled
even to the war-wretched Lebanon, but never once cared to
visit their camps.
Irony is that in Pakistan a simple humanitarian issue has
got so very politicized that its resolution is nowhere in
sight. As a result, these poor
people continue to suffer and live a sub-human life in those
shanty camps.
On the international scene, the world is too busy in war on
terror and the big powers are already too obsessed with
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan
and Israeli-Palestinian conflict. UNHCR says they are not
refugees hence remain out of their orbit. Pakistan doesn't
accept them and
Bangladesh doesn't accord them citizenship, as a result they
remain hung in balance as "stateless with no nationality".
This is despite the fact
that these people are Pakistani by all moral, political and
legal standards. This case is very well taken up in the
recent study of May-006 (A Case
Study on Stranded Pakistanis: A Human Rights Perspective),
conducted by Basil Nabi Malik et al of LUMS-Lahore. The most
important point dwelt
upon in the report per se is the Citizenship Act of 1951. In
this case, a pivotal document, which incorporates the
Stranded Pakistanis in its
definition of a national. In 1978, a presidential ordinance
was promulgated by Zia-ul-Haq which incorporated a new
provision, namely
Section 16-A. Many experts and scholars alike argue that the
said provision in effect expels the Stranded Pakistanis from
the definition of a
Pakistani citizen. However, if the provision is closely
analyzed, and its words scrutinized in depth, it shall be
seen that this section is more in
favor of their return, than actually initially contemplated.
And, the Muslim Ummah is another big disappointment. They
remain in big disarray themselves; so it is futile to expect
anything from them.
Despite all these apathy and indifference we find a solace
in the fact that many organizations are devoting time and
resources on this cause.
The noted ones are the US based humanitarian organization
calling itself a "powerful voice for lifesaving action" -
Refugee International -
whose Maureen Lynch has visited the camps and projected
their plight worldwide. They have also researched on
possible solutions to this
humanitarian issue. So, solutions are there but it needs
sincere commitment from both Pakistan and Bangladesh to
address this issue. Besides,
we also see USCRI (United States Committee for Refugees
International) and AHRC - Asian Human Rights Commission
campaigning for the cause.
On the relief & welfare front, we also see some
organizations that are engaged in actual relief works in the
camps. The noted ones are: US
based OBAT Helpers and Saudi Arabia based MWDO - Muslim
Welfare & Development Organization. Nawa-i-waqt's Foundation
(headed by Majid
Nizami et al) are engaged internationally in raising funds
for their repatriation & rehabilitation in Punjab. Some
organizations are also helping the cause by devoting time &
resource on intellectual and diplomatic fronts which include
mobilizing public opinion and propagating and
disseminating information about their plight. They are
namely, Pakistan Repatriation Council, known by its acronym
of PRC, StrandedPakistanis.org, Stateless People in
Bangladesh of USA and a newly formed association in USA
called Friends of Humanity - FOH. Besides, the Saudi based
organizations namely,
MWL (Muslim World League), IDB (Islamic Development Bank),
and IIRO (International Islamic relief Organization) have
also made significant
contribution towards alleviating the sufferings of these
Pakistanis. |
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The views expressed herein are the writers' own and do not reflect
those of DesPardes.com |
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Faiz Al Najdi is a Riyadh based Pakistani expatriate
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