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Controlling Law and Order

The document summarizes a case study from 1986 where the author, as commissioner of Sibi division in Baluchistan, led efforts to rescue Mir Noor Muhammad Jamali, a tribal chieftain who had been kidnapped by an armed criminal gang. The author mobilized local police and tribesmen to pursue the gang across provincial borders. After exchanging gunfire, the gang released Jamali unharmed, recognizing the authorities' resolve. The successful resolution of the case demonstrated that with coordination between different parts of the government system, no law and order problem is too great to solve. The document argues a similar approach of local involvement and coordination, rather than disproportionate force, would be effective for modern law and order challenges in Pakistan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
63 views3 pages

Controlling Law and Order

The document summarizes a case study from 1986 where the author, as commissioner of Sibi division in Baluchistan, led efforts to rescue Mir Noor Muhammad Jamali, a tribal chieftain who had been kidnapped by an armed criminal gang. The author mobilized local police and tribesmen to pursue the gang across provincial borders. After exchanging gunfire, the gang released Jamali unharmed, recognizing the authorities' resolve. The successful resolution of the case demonstrated that with coordination between different parts of the government system, no law and order problem is too great to solve. The document argues a similar approach of local involvement and coordination, rather than disproportionate force, would be effective for modern law and order challenges in Pakistan
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OP-ED

Controlling law and order


If there is coordination and cooperation, no problem in the field is too great to resolve.
Akbar Ahmed
NOVEMBER 4, 2018
The new government in “Naya Pakistan” is facing the age-old problem of dealing with the
breakdown of law and order. Yet there several factors to consider: There is the coordination
between the provincial government and the divisional/district administration, between the civil
administration and the police, between the elected representatives and the administration and the
local elders. If the different parts of the system worked swiftly in coordination and with resolve,
there was no problem that could not be solved.

Let me present a case-study and, after making allowances for the different cultural and historical
context, see what lessons can be learned for “Naya Pakistan”.

In June 1986 when I was commissioner of Sibi division in Baluchistan, Mir Noor Muhammad
Jamali, a chieftain of the influential Jamali tribe, was kidnapped from Nasirabad, a district
headquarters in Sibi division, by dacoits, or an armed criminal gang. The dacoits headed for their
base in the Sind province with their prize. This incident came after a series of kidnappings in
which dacoits would cross over from the Sind to kidnap people and take them across the
provincial border for ransom. The operations were widespread and becoming increasingly bold.
For the dacoits, it was a highly successful criminal enterprise.

I had recently taken over the Sibi division, and the incident became a test-case formy reputation.
Immediately mobilizing all my resources, I followed the gang in “hot pursuit.” I instructed one
group of my officers to form an advance scouts’ party, along with members of the Jamali tribe,
and to leave without a moment’s delay so as not to lose the trail of the gang. As the second prong
of my attack, Igathered whatever armed men I had available to me and crossed into the Sind
province. I had a great team of field officers, specially the excellent head of the police Sikander
Muhammadzai, who unhesitatingly led his force personally over the next few days.

As commissioner of Sibi division, I was not authorized to act outside my jurisdiction, and
crossing into another province with a raiding party was fraught with dangers. I was constantly in
touch, however, with the chief minister, the head of Baluchistan province, who had telephoned
his counterpart in Sind, informing him of my imminent arrival in his area, and this gave me
administrative cover.

As the news spread, anger grew among the Baluch tribes at the outrage. A tribal war erupting
across provincial borders was a real danger. In the meantime, on the national level, the
opposition was hammering at the newly formed elected government in Islamabad about losing
control of the law and order situation in the country.
Given the low morale, neither civil nor police officials would be inclined to risk their lives in
facing exchange of gunfire. Before long we would have seen large numbers of heavily armed
security personnel in armored vehicles, likely with little understanding of local culture moving
into the area

I knew if the trail went cold we would not be able to recover Noor Jamali easily, if at all. We
were relentless in our chase however. Gunfire was exchanged and several people wounded, but
we kept after the dacoits. The heat was oppressive and the region desolate. We had virtually no
food or water for three days. When I could, I snatched sleep at night in the back seat of the
commissioner’s car, with my Bugti bodyguard throwing a ring of protection around it. My
protection became a matter of honor for them. With their fierce-looking appearance and
reputation, their presence added to the earnestness of our purpose.

Deep in the Sind province, we were in the middle of what I described in my official report later
as “no man’s land.”The people in these villages found it hard to believe that an officer of the
seniority of the commissioner was among them. The police usually locked themselves behind
closed doors in their dilapidated police stations in fear of the dacoits. “The Sind Government,” I
wrote in my report, “cannot even collect revenue from here” and “the local police were
demoralized and fearful.”

After the intensity of our pursuit, the dacoits felt it was no longer worth keeping Noor Jamali.
They told him what was happening was unprecedented and would ruin their business. They
could not have senior officers exchanging fire with them and tramping around in their areas, thus
exposing their hideouts. They released Noor Jamali unconditionally. He was brought home
safely. Given the national prominence the matter had assumed, it was widely reported in the
press. The prime minister and chief minister gave statements to show the extent of control they
had over law and order in the country.

Expressing his appreciation, the chief minister of Baluchistan wrote to me:”This is to place on
record the appreciation of the Provincial Government for good work done and the high sense of
duty displayed by you in giving a hot pursuit to the criminals who had abducted a notable of
Jamali tribe namely Mir Noor Muhammad Jamali and taken to Sind area. But for the untiring
efforts and constant pressure put on the criminals recovery of the abducted tribal elderwould not
have been possible. It is only with such dedication and hard work that these undesirable elements
can be controlled and discouraged. I am confident that you would keep up and continue with
dedication for the eradication of such elements.”

A Baluch chief himself and the former ruler of a Baluch state, Mir Jam Qadir Khan was a
scholarly, compassionate man with a desire to serve his people. He always treated me with honor
and made me feel welcome in Baluchistan. He followed up his generous letter with an equally
generous gesture. He convened an all-Baluchistan jirga or council of chiefs and members of
Parliament where in glowing terms he publicly honored me and my key officials with special
awards.
The word had got out to dacoits in the region: any breach of law would be met by swift and
resolute action. I was informed by my police that a saying was circulating among the dacoits that
it was best to lie low as the “new commissioner was quite mad” and capable of turning up with a
large force at their doorstep in the middle of the night if they broke the law. I would not have any
law and order problem for the rest of my tenure as commissioner of Sibi Division.

There are   lessons for us today. Given the low morale, neither civil nor police officials would be
inclined to risk their lives in facing exchange of gunfire. Before long we would have seen large
numbers of heavily armed security personnel in armored vehicles, likely with little understanding
of local culture moving into the area. Anyone who appeared slightly suspicious-which could
include virtually every citizen-would be picked up and taken for “interrogation.” Ordinary
people would   be outraged by the disproportionate use of force. The dacoits who thrive on local
sympathy would have let things die down before returning to business as usual.

The complicated Baluch case would not have been resolved if the commissioner was not fully
involved at the center of the operation directing and coordinating it, or without the full backing
he  received from the chief minister, the cooperation from his  service colleagues and the moral
support of the public.  If there is coordination and cooperation, no problem in the field is too
great to resolve.

The writer is the Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies at American University, Washington, DC,
and author of Journey into Europe: Islam, Immigration, and Identity

Published in Daily Times, November  4th 2018.

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