A death foretold
On a hot day last August, I landed in Lahore on a flight from London. Blaring headlines were announcing that Nawab Akbar Bugti, known as the 'Tiger of Balochistan', had been killed in a military operation. I switched on the television to see confused newscasters giving contradictory versions of how he had been killed. Over the next few days, the government changed its own version of how this had happened several times. To this day, how exactly Nawab Bugti died remains a mystery. I was one of the last TV journalists to interview the sardar. Months before his actual demise, he had already predicted it. "They want to eliminate us, especially me and [fellow Baloch tribal leader] Balach Marri, and also those Balochs who are not with the government and want their rights," he had told me in his hideout in the mountains, from where he had waged a guerrilla war against the Islamabad regime.
All road and air links to Balochistan were cut off on the day that Bugti was killed. While this was done in an attempt by the authorities to quash any subsequent agitation, those attempts proved futile. Across Balochistan, youths took to the streets to protest the killing of a leader whom they felt had attained martyrdom. The next day, I managed to take the first available flight from Lahore to Quetta. By now, the protests against the government had turned violent.