Nuclear Testing In Balochistan:
See also
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Balochhal Editorial: Congress's Landmark Balochistan Hearing
2012,02,10 -
American Congressmen, Defense Analyst Stress Balochistan's Right to Self-Determination By Malik Siraj Akbar
2012,02,10 -
VIEW: Balochistan: the ISI and the media -Dr Qaisar Rashid
2012,02,10 -
US Congressional Hearing: 'Pakistan using brutal force in Balochistan'
2012,02,10 -
Video file: Committee hears testimonies from human rights groups, scholars and analysts.
2012,02,09 -
EDITORIAL: Balochistan to the fore
2012,02,09 -
Human rights abuses: US committee hears grievances of Balochistan By Huma Imtiaz
2012,02,09 -
Congress body discussing Balochistan today Serious concern conveyed to US
2012,02,08 -
'Simpsons' to Iran: 'This means war!'
2012,02,07 -
USA Congresionnal Hearing on Balochistan, Location Room 2200 of the Rayburn House Office Building
2012,02,06
This is testimony taken at an undisclosed location in Pakistani-controlled Balochistan. Originally meant to be a "question-answer" interview, I've preferred to type it directly in first person following the recorded version.
a local physician's testimony
Interview by Karlos Zurutuza
But in the late 80's we knew that the works in Raspoh had nothing to do with any sort of mining. We started to suspect that there was something very obscure under all those muddy earthworks. Journalists came from all over but the government argued that it was an arsenal. The explanation seemed to satisfy almost everybody as Raspoh is located on the border with Afghanistan. It was the perfect excuse.
Finally we knew that the area was being reshaped to carry out nuclear tests. The BNP (Baluch National Party) and the rest of the coalitions protested and there was a great reaction at all levels. But General Zia was supported by the West because the Russians were in Afghanistan. No one paid any attention to the denunciations by Baloch and humanitarian organizations.
General Zia died in 1988, a year before the Russians withdrew from Afghanistan. By then, we all knew what was happening on mountain Raspoh and the West finally began to worry about the issue. The Japanese even offered money to Islamabad in return to suspend the tests.
The blasts took place on May 28, 1998, just after India´s own nuclear tests on her territory. But Pakistan was still denying everything so Akhtar Mengal, the then Chief Minister of the Balochistan provincial government, came in person to the place to ask for explanations. The police in the area told him that three people had been killed "by heat stroke." It could be as Chagai region is an area where temperatures are often extreme. But what confirmed the worst suspicions was the death of several camels that day. Could a camel possibly die because of the heat?
It was outrageous. Despite being condemned to the most egregious underdevelopment, Islamabad was "rewarding" us with five nuclear detonations whose effects would survive to generations.
Now we suspect that they are preparing more tests in Gadain region, 25 kilometers from Khuzdar. It is a place where two closely spaced mountains offer a perfect place, reasonably far away from any satellite surveillance. People are being evacuated and access is already fully restricted. We assume that they´re waiting for India to detonate their warheads.
Nobody knows the exact extent of radiation among the inhabitants in the Chagai region. The government has banned access to the area and it is impossible to carry out any study on the local population. In any case, physicians like myself who have treated patients from the region have come across large numbers of cases of skin cancer and eye cancer in particular. The radiation probably reached the underground water reservoirs. People rely on those as we hardly get any rain here. A patient from Dalbandin who had visited Raspoh told me that the black granite had acquired a yellowish color, the same as the water. We need someone to take a water sample and analyze it abroad. No laboratory in Pakistan dares to do so for fear of reprisals. I myself do not dare to give my real name because, quite possibly, the ISI (Pakistani intelligence) would kill me by the time this interview was published."
Karlos Zurutuza is a freelance correspondent and writes in Basque, Spanish and English. His work has been published in several newspapers and magazines.














