At the time of Pakistan’s creation, Balochistan, under the name of the Khanate of Kalat, had its own independent administration, judicial system, and a legitimate parliament known as the Dar-ul-Awam. It also had a treaty relationship with the British. The British had formally acknowledged in writing that, following the partition of India, a separate decision would be made regarding Kalat’s future.
However, when the Indian subcontinent was divided into two states to maintain a demographic balance between Muslim- and Hindu-majority areas, full sovereignty was not granted to the princely states. From a legal standpoint, the Pakistani authorities did not possess the right to incorporate the State of Kalat into Pakistan, since Kalat was neither part of British India nor a British colony. The partition plan applied only to territories that were components of British India or directly administered colonial possessions.
On August 11, 1947, the State of Kalat declared complete and comprehensive independence, free from any form of British influence or control. It proclaimed itself a formal and legitimate state, fully sovereign in all internal and external affairs.
Pakistan came into existence three days after Kalat declared its independence. The leader of Pakistan, Governor-General Muhammad Ali Jinnah, who had previously served as the legal counsel for the State of Kalat and was well aware of the Khanate’s constitutional status, neither formally recognized nor explicitly rejected Kalat’s independence. Instead, he proposed to Mir Ahmad Yar Khan, the ruler of the Khanate of Kalat, that Kalat accede to Pakistan while retaining a form of provincial autonomy.
The Dar-ul-Awam of the State of Kalat, which functioned as a parliament with full legislative authority, rejected Pakistan’s proposal of accession for several reasons:
1. Kalat was not part of British India and had a treaty relationship with the British.
2. It was an established state that had declared independence prior to the creation of Pakistan.
3. It did not regard Pakistan as a genuinely independent country, but rather as a successor to British authority and a protector of British interests.
4. The Dar-ul-Awam acted as the true representative of the Baloch tribes and believed that joining Pakistan would endanger the Baloch nation’s identity, status, economy, resources, political autonomy, wealth, and cultural heritage.
When the Dar-ul-Awam rejected Pakistan’s proposal of accession on the grounds mentioned above, Pakistan responded by using conspiracies and military force. It first separated certain territories from the State of Kalat and attached them to Pakistan. Subsequently, in March 1948, Pakistani troops entered Kalat.
Mir Ahmad Yar Khan was placed under intense political and military pressure. Fearing mass bloodshed and heavy casualties among the Baloch people, he ultimately signed the instrument of accession. As a result, Kalat’s military and political authority was dissolved, and the state was incorporated into Pakistan, an incorporation that, according to this perspective, lacked political, legal, and logical legitimacy.
First Resistance: 1948
Following the forced implementation of accession, the first armed resistance emerged in 1948. A member of the Kalat royal family, Prince Abdul Karim Khan Baloch, the younger brother of the Khan, rejected the accession and took to the mountains with several hundred followers.
From this base, he initiated an armed campaign for Balochistan’s independence against Pakistan. His group carried out guerrilla attacks on military convoys, checkpoints, and security forces, marking the beginning of organized armed resistance in the region after Kalat’s incorporation into Pakistan.
The uprising led by Prince Abdul Karim Khan was critically undermined by the lack of formal support from the outset. He did not receive backing from Khan Mir Ahmad Yar Khan, and unity among the Baloch tribal chiefs was absent. Some remained neutral, while others chose silence and did not join the rebellion.
There was also a severe shortage of weapons and ammunition, and the broader Baloch population had not yet developed a clear, collective political understanding of their future direction.
Ultimately, facing isolation and limited resources, Abdul Karim Khan surrendered. He was imprisoned and did not re-emerge as an active opponent of Pakistan thereafter.
Although Abdul Karim Khan’s uprising was effectively suppressed, it laid the foundation for an armed resistance movement for Balochistan’s independence against Pakistan. His rebellion became a formative chapter in Baloch political memory, one that, over time, was passed down from generation to generation as a deeply symbolic and revered legacy of struggle.
