Affiliation:
1. Islamic University of Science & Technology, India
Abstract
The passage of the eighteenth amendment bill in 2010 represented a critical milestone in Pakistan’s constitutional history. It sought to better manage the perennial federal-provincial tensions by restructuring the country’s constitutional framework to assuage the grievances of the ethno-regional movements opposed to the centralised state system, especially in Balochistan, where Pakistan’s territorial integrity faces its toughest challenge. Islamabad’s inflexibility in accommodating ethnic dissidence through various institutional measures has exacerbated ethnic tensions and hardened nationalist sentiments. The eighteenth amendment aimed to reverse deformations introduced during dictatorships and promote a more federal polity. More than a decade has passed since the introduction of the bill, yet the question lingers: Did the amendment achieve its intended goal of mitigating the ethnic conflict in Balochistan? This article scrutinises the current situation in Balochistan and offers a critically oriented analysis of the amendment’s impact on the province’s security scenario. It contends that the amendment fell short of its objectives because it remained silent on issues of critical import to the Baloch and failed to address the underlying issues fuelling the conflict.
Reference38 articles.
1. A Step Towards Inclusive Federalism in Pakistan? The Politics of the 18th Amendment
2. Ahmed I (2020a) The 18th amendment: historical developments and debates in Pakistan. ISAS Insights. Available at: https://www.isas.nus.edu.sg/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/EDITED-Insights-641-Imran-HS-converted.pdf
3. The Dynamics of (Ethno)Nationalism and Federalism in Postcolonial Balochistan, Pakistan
4. Rentier Capitalism