The United States is deeply concerned about the ongoing violence in Balochistan, especially targeted killings, disappearances and other human rights abuses,” Victoria Nuland said
June 24, 2013
http://muatasimqazi.com/2012/01/14/us-state-department-answers-baloch-tweeters-question-on-balochistan-situation/
US State Department answers Baloch Tweeter’s question on Balochistan situation
January 14, 2012 | 9
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When you want to make yourself heard, the whole
world is out there to listen to you. What you need is the right medium. In this
case, it’s Twitter.
Rights activists and relatives of disappeared
political activists in conflict-stricken Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest
province in terms of area with considerable reserves of natural resources, have
long been engaged in raising their voice against injustices and human rights
violations — committed against the ethnic Baloch population by the military —
through peaceful protests and token hunger-strike camps. Desperate faces of
family members of missing Baloch activists, carrying placards in front of press
clubs in Quetta, Karachi and Islamabad, have garnered very little media
attention in and outside the country.
However, now it seems that these activists and
family members have the right tools to amplify their voices — thus reaching to a
global audience, including international rights groups and Western
governments.
Following in footsteps of their counterparts of
the Arab Spring, Baloch activists have been using social networking sites to
mobilize Baloch masses and as well as let the word out from Balochistan as
Pakistan’s mainstream media evade reporting issues concerning Balochistan and
international media personnel are barred from traveling to the conflict-hit
province.
The social networking site Twitter is a blessing
in disguise for the Baloch youth. Tweeple from Balochistan and in other parts of
the county, Baloch diaspora living in Persian Gulf countries and those living
in the West, including in the US and Canada, have constantly been tweeting
updates about the worsening situation in the region.
Baloch Tweeple have fully grappled an opportunity
offered by US Department of State that allows Twitter users all over the world
to submit questions about issues that matter to them.
As part of their 21st Century
Statecraft Month, Department of State has set up ten officials
accounts in various languages which Tweeters can use to pose questions to the
Department by using the hashtag #AskState to let the US
government know about global issues. A spokesperson for the Department of State,
Victoria Nuland, in turn responds to selected questions each Friday afternoon
in the month of January during the Department’s Daily Press
Briefings. Subsequently, a small video clip for each accepted question and its
response from Nuland is posted on the Department of State’s Youtube
channel.
For the past two weeks, Baloch Tweeple have been
asking the Department of State on many of its official Twitter feeds about the
latter’s stance over continued enforced disappearances, targeted killings and
surfacing of mutilated, bullet-riddled corpses of political dissidents in
Balochistan, what many analysts term as a ‘slow-motion genocide’ of Baloch
people by Pakistan.
Ali Gohar Jamali, who tweets @cadet1081 from Islamabad,
Pakistan, has regularly been submitting questions to the US Department of
State’s Urdu feed @USAUrdu. In a tweet posted
on January 7, Jamali asked the Department: “Pakistan is committing a genocide
of Baloch Nation.Why US does not intervene in Balochistan and make us get our
freedom?”
In an earlier tweet, Jamali had asked, “Whats US
policy about Balochistan and Pakistani atrocities on Baloch People?”
Jamali’s tweet about ‘Baloch genocide’ had been
accepted and answered by the spokesperson. According to Nuland, Jamali’s
question was one the most popular questions on their feed. (See the video)
In a very carefully well-crafted and calculated
response to Jamali’s question, given the strained relations between Islamabad
and Washington and the former’s sensitivities towards Balochistan, spokesperson
Victoria Nuland said that the United States was concerned about the situation in
Balochistan.
“The United States is deeply concerned about the
ongoing violence in Balochistan, especially targeted
killings, disappearances and other human rights abuses,” Nuland said, adding
that Balochistan was a complex issue and the best way forward for all parties
was to have a peaceful dialogue to resolve their differences.
Severely tortured and bullet-ridden corpses of
more than 370 political activists, journalists, doctors and teachers have
surfaced in deserted areas across the province since July 2010.
Without mentioning that Pakistan military is
alleged for all these rights violations, Nuland said they had discussed these
issues with Pakistani officials and have also urged them to initiate
a dialogue to solve the issue.
Acceptance of Jamali’s question and the
subsequent response from the Department’s spokesperson is heartening. It should
encourage educated Baloch youth to engage more in online activism and advocacy
rather than mere futile political sloganeering or mud-slinging.
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