The Rediff Interview/Balawaristan leader Nawaz Khan Naji

March 15, 2004


The northern part of what India calls Pakistan-occupied 
Kashmir and Pakistan calls its Northern Areas comprises the 
remote and backward areas of Gilgit and Baltistan. While what 
Pakistan calls Azad Kashmir comprises barely 4,000 square 
miles, the Northern Areas cover more than 28,000 square 
miles, though most of the area is too harsh for human 
habitation. Some 2,500 square miles of this region was ceded to 
China under a border agreement in 1963.

The people of this region, which comprises the districts of 
Gilgit, Skardu, Ghezer, Diamar and Ganchhe, however, prefer 
to call it Balawaristan, and many insist that they have 
been illegally occupied by Pakistan since November 16, 1947, 
when Pakistani troops and tribal volunteers invaded the then 
independent state of Jammu and Kashmir.

The Balawaristan National Front established on July 30, 
1992, is currently headed by acting chairman Nawaz Khan Naji. 
In an exclusive interview with rediff.com Senior Editor 
Ramananda Sengupta, Naji explains why, despite being shot at 
by local policemen in June last year in an obvious 
assassination attempt, he still leads the movement for independence.

What made you take up the cause of independence?

I belong to Gilgit and am 41 years old. I am a graduate and 
have been a political activist since my student days. When 
I was a student, the people of Gilgit, of Baltistan, were 
crying to be annexed with Pakistan or with Kashmir. But I 
introduced a new ideology, that we are neither Pakistanis nor 
Kashmiris. That the people from Ladakh to Chitral have a 
separate identity, status, ideology, entity, that we have our 
own languages, culture, race, geography, and common 
economy, but we have never had a separate status. This area must 
first become a separate unit. Then we shall decide whether 
we want to go with Pakistan, with Kashmir, or seek 
independence.

For this purpose, I have established a political party, the 
Balawaristan National Front. Initially I was alone, but 
then I got many followers and was elected chairman.

What is Balawaristan?

I believe the Balti, Brooshoo (Yashkon), Sheen, Khoh 
(Chitrali) and Wakhi people and those Kashmiris, Gujjars, 
Kohistanis, Pathans, Turks and Hazaris who lived there before the 
Pakistani occupation belong to the same nation. We need a 
common name. This area is the junction of the Himalayas, 
Hindu Kush and Karakoram ranges in between the 'roof of the 
world' Tibet and Pamir. There are many high peaks, like Nanga 
Parbat, and the biggest glaciers of the world, like 
Siachen, here. In the  past, the area was known as Bala, which 
means high. The people were called Balawar, or highlanders. 
That is why we call the area from Ladakh to Chitral 
Balawaristan.

This area was once part of Jammu and Kashmir. After 
Partition and the wars with India, it was occupied by Pakistan. 
But it is never described as Azad Kashmir, but as the 
Northern Areas by Islamabad, which rules it by proxy...

In the early 18th century, Balawar was divided into several 
states, which were attacked and occupied by Tibetans, by 
Chinese, and others. By 1850, there were three powers in the 
region -- Dogras, Sikhs and the British. They attacked 
first in Ladakh, then Baltistan, then Gilgit, and then Chitral, 
and occupied the area. From 1850 to 1947, the region was 
under Kashmiri rulers.

But the people of the region fought to expel the Dogras 
from Gilgit-Baltistan. They had a golden chance during 
Partition, when the maharaja [acceded] to India. At that time our 
people fought against the Kashmiris and established a free 
government, the Republic of Gilgit. The first president of 
Gilgit was Raja Sharif Khan.

After 15 days of rule, they asked for Pakistan's help -- 
not for annexation, because Kashmir had already been annexed 
by India -- and Pakistani officials came to Gilgit. But 
because they were weak, the Pakistanis occupied the area, 
expelled the president, appointed a political agent, and Gilgit 
became once again a political agency of Pakistan, like it 
was an agency of British India in the past.

But Pakistan had no chance legally to rule the area. 
Therefore they made an agreement with the Azad Kashmir government 
in 1949 that until the status of Kashmir is settled, the 
area would be ruled by the federal government in Islamabad. 
It is under this agreement that Islamabad rules the region.

But the Pakistani government is only a caretaker government 
till the decision on Kashmir. Once the Kashmir issue is 
settled, we will decide our future course, whether we  want to 
go with Pakistan, with India, with an independent Kashmir, 
or become independent ourselves.

You mentioned Ladakh and Kargil as part of this region. 
What makes you think they will join you?

I see Balawaristan comprising Gilgit-Baltistan, Chitral, 
Sheenaki, Kohistan, Ladakh and Kargil. But the inclusion of 
Chitral, Sheenaki, Kohistan and Ladakh and Kargil in 
Balawaristan depends totally and voluntarily on the will of their 
indigenous  population. Once they see us as an independent 
nation which shares their cultural and other values, it 
will be up to them to decide.

The area is rich in natural resources and minerals, yet it 
remains so backward...

Founder of Pakistan Mohammad Ali Jinnah described Kashmir 
as the jugular vein of Pakistan. Actually this jugular vein 
is the Indus river, which flows through Ladakh, Baltistan 
and Gilgit. The second river is the Jhelum, which flows from 
the valley. The third is the Chenab which comes from Jammu. 
If this region separates from Pakistan, the jugular vein 
will be cut. The big jugular vein is Balawaristan, which has 
the most important river in Pakistan.

We have gold, minerals, fresh water from the glaciers, the 
power from the rivers. We are actually a buffer state of 
Asia. We are above Asia, centre of Asia, fulcrum of Asia, 
with borders with Pakistan, India, China, the Central Asian 
states and Afghanistan.

Gilgit is very important. The Pakistani government knows 
the importance of this area. So it doing a few things for the 
area in terms of development, but that is not enough. We 
are very important for Pakistan, but Pakistan is not giving 
enough attention to us.

Why?

Because we are a very backward region, far from Islamabad, 
there is a communication gap. Because, unlike the 
Kashmiris, we are not crying too much. We are not yet an independent 
nation. So someone who is not crying, who will give 
attention?

But now we are growing as a nation, because roads, 
telephonic communication, recently these networks are developing. 
Then we will connect to each other. And now we know about 
the world, what is parliament, what is president, prime 
minister, what is democracy, what is identity. Earlier, this was 
an island cut off from the world. The aeroplane first came 
to Gilgit, then the Jeep and other vehicles came. We are 
naturally backward. Therefore the Pakistan government was not 
giving us much attention. Now the Pakistan government is 
thinking seriously about the area, because the people are 
thinking about their basic and democratic rights. So now 
Islamabad has increased its budget for the region. 

So who rules the region?

Pakistan's Kashmir affairs ministry is the ruler of 
Balawaristan. The Jammu and Kashmir minister is the chief 
executive of the area. He can make rules and regulations and 
administer the area. His orders are law. The area is sensitive 
militarily, so the military also has a say. But there is no 
participation of locals in the sense of elected 
representation. The chief secretary, the IGP, the home secretary, are 
all exported from Pakistan. A few secondary posts are held 
by their people who belong to Balawaristan.

What about allegations of human rights violations?

There are too many human rights problems. An area which is 
without a constitution, no independent judiciary, no 
democratic setup, these are all very big violations of human 
rights. The chief executive is not chosen by the people. 
Violation of human rights is not only to kill the people.

TOMORROW: 'We are ready to fight against Pakistan'
Home page
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1