http://www.aawsat.com/english/news.asp?section=2&id=20010


The Sufferings of Iran's Minorities

26/02/2010 
By Amir Taheri


Few people outside Iran have heard of Abdul-Malik Rigi. 

 

Inside Iran, however, many see the 32-year old Baluch rebel as a mixture of 
Scarlet Pimpernel and Al Capone. In a few years, he had managed to become a 
thorn in the side of the emerging military-security regime in Tehran. 

Rigi has been blamed for the deaths of over 100 members of the Islamic 
Revolutionary Guard, including several senior commanders, and members of other 
security organizations of the Khomeinist republic, not to mention dozens of 
civilians as "collateral damage." 

Last Tuesday, however, Rigi's luck ran out when a Pakistani passenger plane in 
which he was travelling to an un-named Arab country was forced to land in Iran. 
Within minutes of the forced landing, Rigi was in the hands of the Islamic 
Revolutionary Guards. 

The incident raises a number of questions. 

First, how did the Khomeinist authorities learn about Rigi's presence in the 
Pakistani aircraft? 

Everyone knows that Rigi travelled with different passports, using different 
aliases. One must assume that he would have taken some precaution before 
boarding a passenger plane. In any case, this was not the first time Rigi was 
flying out of Pakistan. Last summer he flew to Europe for a four-nation tour. 

Did the Pakistani authorities inform Tehran of Rigi's presence in the plane? 

No one, outside the two governments, could know for sure. Nevertheless, there 
is a possibility that Islamabad decided to terminate its hospitality towards 
Rigi by denouncing him to the Iranians. 

This would be in harmony with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari's recent 
attempts at wooing Tehran. 

The Pakistani leader's relations with his principal ally, the United States, 
have deteriorated in the past few months as the new Obama administration in 
Washington tried to weaken Zardari's hold on power by flirting with his 
opponents. 

For a while, Washington, supported by some regional allies, tried to build 
former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif up as a replacement for Zardari. Washington 
has now abandoned that policy. But Zardari sees the US a fickle friend. 

Then there is the concern that the Obama administration might suddenly drop 
Afghanistan as it is dropping Iraq. 

In that case, Pakistan would need a working relationship with Iran that is 
likely to emerge as a major player in Afghanistan. 

Yet another reason for the probable change of Islamabad's attitude may be a 
quid pro quo: Iran stops supporting rebels in Pakistani Baluchistan in exchange 
for Rigi's capture. It is possible that a deal was made last month during an 
unprecedented visit by Iran's Interior Minister, General Muhammad Najjar, to 
Islamabad. 

If one does not agree that Islamabad has decided to put relations with Tehran 
on a different trajectory, one must assume that the Iranians obtained 
information about Rigi's movements by bribing Pakistani officials. In that 
case, Zardari would have to decide whether a security service that could be 
bought by foreign powers has a place in the democratic system he claims he is 
building. 

The second question that Rigi's arrest raises is the place that armed struggle 
should have in the fight against an increasingly unpopular regime. 

The issue has generated much debate in the past few weeks. 

The regime's success in containing opposition demonstrations during the first 
days of this month has prompted supporters of armed struggle to raise their 
voices. 

The People's Mujahedin, an Islamist-leftist group, has criticised the "Green" 
opposition movement for its "utopian reliance on peaceful protest." The Party 
of Kurdish Life (PJAK), the Iranian branch of the Kurdistan Workers Party 
(PKK), has expressed similar views. A number of smaller Maoist groups have gone 
further by calling for urban guerrilla operations. 

Iran's democratic opposition should not listen to such siren songs. 

Rigi's arrest shows the limits of armed action and the ultimate failure of a 
strategy based on violence. Although the Khomeinist regime is a repressive 
machine, it has not yet succeeded in closing all avenues for expressing 
dissent. 

In most cases, armed struggle degenerates into terrorism. And that provides the 
military-security coalition with a pretext for strengthening its hold on power 
and urging an even harsher crackdown against the opposition. Often, terrorism 
and military-security oppression form a couple engaged in a deadly dance. 

Rigi's "armed struggle" did more harm than good even to Iran's Baluch people. 
His attacks enabled the regime to push aside legitimate Baluch grievances, and 
portray as "terrorists and foreign agents" all those who demanded a fair deal 
for an oppressed people. 

With or without Rigi, the fact remains that Iranian Baluchis are victims of 
systemic discrimination. 

Life expectancy in the province of Sistan and Baluchistan is a full ten years 
lower than the Iranian national average. Illiteracy rate in the Baluchi parts 
of the province is six times higher than the national average while 
unemployment hovers around an incredible 40 per cent. 

The province is granted less than a quarter of one per cent of the public 
investment, much of it allocated to military projects that generate few jobs 
for the locals. 

More than a third of the Baluch work force manages to earn a living thanks to 
seasonal jobs in other parts of Iran, especially Khorassan. Many more migrate 
to other countries of the region or to North America. 

Iranian Baluch are also victims of cultural and religious oppression. 

The regime spares no effort to wipe out Baluchi, an old member of the Iranic 
family of languages. 

More than 80 per cent of Iran's estimated two million Baluchi citizens are 
Sunni Muslims and as such victims of religious discrimination by a regime that 
bases its claim of legitimacy on an extremist version of duodecimal Shiism. 

Over the past 30 years, all but four of the schools teaching Islamic Sunni 
theology in Iranian Baluchistan have been shut by the regime. Many Baluch 
clerics, known as Maulawis, have been expelled from the province and at least 
two dozens have been murdered in mysterious circumstances. The regime has also 
seized at least half of Baluchi mosques and appointed Shiite mullahs as Friday 
prayer leaders in some predominantly Sunni villages and towns. 

For 30 years, forcing the Baluch to convert to the Khomeinist version of Shiism 
has been a constant policy of the regime. That campaign has intensified since 
the election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president in 2005. 

Rigi's "armed struggle" did nothing to rectify the injustice that the 
Khomeinist regime is doing to the Baluch people. His capture, however, will not 
hide that injustice. Nor will it change the atmosphere of violence and 
insecurity that reigns in a large chunk of southeast Iran. 

The opposition movement must address the fact that, under the Khomeinist 
regime, Iran's religious and ethnic minorities are subjected to a double 
injustice and offer credible guidelines for tackling the problem. 

Last year, Mehdi Karrubi, one of the key figures of the opposition, briefly 
flirted with the subject before quickly moving away from it. That is not good 
enough. Rigi's capture should provide an opportunity for a more serious debate 
on the subject.


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