The party of an infamous drug kingpin, Imam Bheel, is trying to discredit the Baloch resistance in the eyes of the masses.
The pro-Pakistan National Party, which has become totally redundant in Balochistan politics by toeing Islamabad's line, has launched a frontal attack against a Baloch resistance group called Baloch Liberation Front by insisting that one of its party leaders Maula Bakhsh Dashti was gunned down by the resistance.
Baloch resistance leader and torture victim, Dr. Allah Nazar Baloch, in an interview with The News International had for the first time publicly disowned the killing of Maula Bakhsh Dashti who died on July 11 when he was shot dead as he was returning home from a relative's funeral in Kech.
In an interview with The News International, the 37-year-old liberation leader said he preferred books over guns "But if I have to choose one I'll prefer the book. It's the book which guides my gun."
The National Party (NP) had ehoed the military line and squarely blamed Dr. Baloch for the murder of Dashti but politician-cum-militant leader said, "I've worked with Maula Bakhsh Dashti and other leaders of the NP during my student life. I've had political differences with them since then, but it doesn't mean I'll kill them for having ideas other than mine. I believe in political process and I'll prefer to persuade them through dialogue."
In spite of Dr. Baloch's denial, the pro-Pakistan party acting as if it was the public relations department of the Pakistan military, called the ISPR, inisisted that the medic who is now a national hero is the main culprit.
The National Party is also trying to counter the genuine forces of Baloch resistance in the United Nations through deceptive means. Inter-Services Intelligence last week sent a senator from the party to the Palace of Nations in Geneva to counter the work Baloch human rights activists there.
The party in spring publicly owned Imam Bheel, who is a henchman of the I.S.I. and who was declared by U.S. President Barack Obama's as a drug kingpin last year, as its leader inviting condemnation of the civil society.
Some party insiders say had it been a principled organization, the National Party would have accepted former policeman Khair Mohammad Jamali, who had annihilated Bheel's father Yaqub Gung in a dare devil vendetta, in its fold instead of the drug smuggler. Gung had wiped out Jamali's entire family and the former deputy superintendent of police closed in on Gung and had shot him dead many years later in the manner of a suspense thriller.
Billionaire Bheel is said to provide whiskey to some leaders of the National Party.
http://www.examiner.com/foreign-policy-in-baltimore/i-s-i-b-team-tries-to-discredit-baloch-resistance-penetrate-u-n
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