Quetta Bombing Brings Balochistan’s Growing Anti-China Sentiment Into Limelight

While the Taliban has claimed the hotel attack, an array of militant groups are targeting the Chinese presence in Pakistan.

LAHORE, Pakistan — At least five people were killed and 12 injured in a car bombing targeting the most luxurious hotel in Quetta, the capital of Pakistan’s volatile province of Balochistan. The Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has claimed responsibility for the attack on Serena Hotel, where the Chinese ambassador Nong Rong was staying. 

China was quick to condemn the bombing. In a statement the Chinese embassy offered “condolences to the unfortunate victims and sympathy to the injured”. While the ambassador wasn’t present at the hotel at the time of the attack, security officials fear he might have been the target.

Balochistan, a hub of militancy since Pakistan’s partition, has witnessed a growing insurgency over the past two decades, in line with the U.S.-led war on terror in the region. The Pakistan Army’s latest spree in operations in the 2000s decades, surrounding the 2006 killing of tribal leader Akbar Bugti has further fanned a Baloch nationalist struggle against the state.

The latest wave of Baloch separatist militancy uses decades-old grievances of the local population, accusing the state of misappropriating the province’s natural resources, with Balochistan’s mineral wealth alone potentially valuing $50 trillion, according to the ‘Geological Survey of Pakistan’.

Balochistan also has geostrategic value for Pakistan, with the province bordering Afghanistan and Iran, along with the Gwadar Port offering access to the Arabian Sea. In recent years, the port has become an important outlet for China’s Belt And Road initiative, with the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC)—Bejing’s highest overseas investment valued at $87 billion—connecting Xinjiang and Balochistan through a network of roads and industrial development.

Before TTP’s claim of the Quetta bombing, many assumed the separatist terror outfit Balochistan Liberation Army might have been behind the attack. 

The Balochistan Liberation Army, which views the Chinese investment in Balochistan as a neocolonial venture jointly undertaken by Islamabad and Beijing, has orchestrated many raids aimed at the CPEC.

In addition to multiple attacks on security personnel deployed in Balochistan, the group murdered 10 laborers from Sindh in a 2017 motorbike raid at Gwadar, a city with a heavy military presence. The group killed four in a gun attack on the Chinese consulate in Karachi in 2018. 

The next year, they targeted Gwadar’s luxurious Zaver Pearl Continental Hotel. They later said they chose the hotel as it was a centerpiece of the multi-billion-dollar CPEC project, and wanted to target Chinese and other investors. The Balochistan Liberation Army also attempted to hold the Pakistan Stock Exchange hostage last year. 

“The local Baloch are concerned that since the signatory is the federation, the CPEC will only benefit the center and not them,” Quetta-based human rights activist Jalila Haider told Zenger News. 

“The separatists say the agreement is null and void because they believe it’s our land and no one can make any agreements here. They are also apprehensive about [growing] Chinese presence altering the Baloch demography and culture.”

According to a 2012 Gallup Survey, 37 percent of Baloch wanted a separate homeland, while 67 percent desire provincial autonomy. Observers say those numbers have increased as a result of the CPEC agreements, which many locals feel doesn’t consider the interests of the people of Balochistan.

Meanwhile, the TTP’s claims on the Serena Hotel bombing have further reaffirmed the rise of jihadist groups like the Taliban and Islamic State along the Af-Pak border, with many attributing their resurgence to the dynamics of the ongoing Afghanistan peace negotiations. 

“This is the blowback from the Afghan peace process, which has a direct impact on Quetta. The bombing has delivered a message [from the Taliban] that they still exist, and are still strong, showing that they can now target even the securest places,” said Haider.

A jihadist umbrella featuring militants from Islamic State, TTP, Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi have regularly launched attacks in Balochistan. The Islamic State-led umbrella has launched some of the deadliest attacks in Balochistan. 

They have targeted the Quetta Hospital in 2016, the Bethel Memorial Methodist Church in December 2017, and the Mastung election rally in 2018 — the second deadliest attack in the country’s history. The Islamic State and Jamaat-ul-Ahrar claimed the suicide bombing at the Quetta mosque that killed 15 in January last year. In January, Islamic State claimed the Machh attack, killing 11 Hazara miners. 

While many experts and rights activists accuse the military establishment of using the Af-Pak border area to fan jihadist insurgency in Afghanistan, some analysts also say that sections of the Army have pitted jihadists against the separatist militia in order to counter Baloch separatists.

“There are obviously operational limitations, especially in areas with rugged trains,” said Lieutenant General Talat Masood, a former secretary at the Ministry of Defense Production, told Zenger News. “It is there that the strategy to pit one group against the other comes in handy. However, it’s not a long-term solution to eliminate the diverse array of militancy in Balochistan.”

Security experts feel that inclining themselves against China and launching attacks aimed at Chinese projects would not only allow jihadists to signal a show of strength, it would also increase their recruitment in the area. 

In addition to Chinese Uighur Muslim camps in Xinjiang being an ideological driving force for Islamist groups, the CPEC itself became a symbol of ‘infidel’ overreach given the Pakistan Army’s increase in crackdown on jihadist outfits in the aftermath of the unveiling of the project six years ago.

Anwar-ul-Haq Kakar, the co-founder of the province’s ruling Balochistan Awami Party, believes separatist Baloch outfits are supported by India’s foreign intelligence agency Research & Analysis Wing and Afghan foreign intelligence agency National Directorate of Security to fuel the insurgency in Balochistan. 

The arrest in 2017 of Indian national Kulbhushan Jadhav, self-identified Research & Analysis Wing spy who said in a video released by Pakistan Army that he was tasked with jeopardizing CPEC, has added momentum to claims of a joint Afghan-Indian plot to target Chinese investments.

“TTP is a tactical and strategic arm of National Directorate of Security,” Anwar-ul-Haq Kakar, the co-founder of the province’s ruling Balochistan Awami Party (BAP), told Zenger News. 

“Of course, you’re not implementing Sharia by targeting the Chinese ambassador. Clearly, the objective is something else. But yes, stopping [militants] is our responsibility. It’s a complicated challenge given the porous border.”

“Their goal is to create a new country based on ethnicity. If deprivation were the reason behind [separatist militancy] you would also see it in Gilgit-Baltistan, South Punjab, and Interior Sindh,” Kakar said.

Despite the recent ceasefire agreement and overtures for peace, Pakistan Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed blamed India for the Quetta bombing, saying “their attempt to damage Pakistan will fail”. 

Amidst the multi-pronged militancy in Balochistan, which is now taking an anti-China orientation, many express concerns regarding the reach of the Serena Bombing perpetrators given the security was bolstered due to the presence of the Chinese ambassador. 

Officials say the car, loaded with up to 60 kilograms (132 pounds) of explosive material, used an unregulated route to reach the target, despite passing a few check-posts and detectors on the way. 

Questions have been raised over the security apparatus for years. Many of the X-ray Inspection Systems still being used across the country are a part of the PKR 1 billion ($6.5 million) worth detectors imported in 2010, which are under the National Accountability Bureau’s investigation for being faulty.

“I’m sure there are countless detectors still being used all over Pakistan, from five-star hotels to airports, that don’t detect anything,” said Kakar.

(Edited by Amrita Das and Gaurab Dasgupta)