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The former separatist leaders vowed to only engage in peaceful struggle from now on.

More than 100 Baluch militants surrender in Pakistan vowing to become a 'useful part' of society

AFP

Over a hundred Baluch militants fighting against Pakistani forces in the separatist-insurgency wracked southwestern Baluchistan province have surrendered and pledged their allegiance to the country, officials said.

A group of 59 militants including two key commanders appeared before the media, along with senior politicians and government officials from the province, to announce they would end militant activities and become a "useful part" of society.

They followed a group of 47 militants surrendered on Saturday. All were given amnesty by the government. "These people were in fact misled by the anti-state elements who are being funded by foreign spy agencies," said Sanaullah Zehri, the senior minister in Baluchistan.

"They have now pledged to lead a good life as true Pakistanis," he said.

The militants who surrendered were from groups such as Baluch Republican Army (BRA), Baluch National Movement (BNM), and Lashkare-e-Baluchistan (Army of Baluchistan). "We were trapped by our leaders who said they are fighting for the rights of Baluchs, but later we realised that they were enjoying their lives abroad and had pushed us and our families to a war here," Obaidullah alias Babrak, a Lashkar-e-Baluchistan commander, said.

Pakistan's largest province is riven by sectarian strife. Its roughly seven million inhabitants have long complained they do not receive a fair share of its gas and mineral wealth.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: More than 100 militants surrender
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