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NY Times, Feb. 8 2015
For Saudis and Pakistan, a Bird of Contention
By DECLAN WALSH
For decades, royal Arab hunting expeditions have traveled to the far
reaches of Pakistan in pursuit of the houbara bustard — a waddling,
migratory bird whose meat, they believe, contains aphrodisiac powers.
Little expense is spared for the elaborate winter hunts. Cargo planes
fly tents and luxury jeeps into custom-built desert airstrips, followed
by private jets carrying the kings and princes of Persian Gulf countries
along with their precious charges: expensive hunting falcons that are
used to kill the white-plumed houbara.
This year’s hunt, however, has run into difficulty.
It started in November, when the High Court in Baluchistan, the vast and
tumultuous Pakistani province that is a favored hunting ground, canceled
all foreign hunting permits in response to complaints from conservationists.
Those experts say the houbara’s habitat, and perhaps the long-term
survival of the species, which is already considered threatened, has
been endangered by the ferocious pace of hunting.
That legal order ballooned into a minor political crisis last week when
a senior Saudi prince and his entourage landed in Baluchistan,
attracting unusually critical media attention and a legal battle that is
scheduled to reach the country’s Supreme Court in the coming days.
Anger among conservationists was heightened by the fact that the prince
— Fahd bin Sultan bin Abdul Aziz, the governor of Tabuk province — along
with his entourage had killed 2,100 houbara over 21 days during last
year’s hunt, according to an official report leaked to the Pakistani
news media, or about 20 times more than his allocated quota.
Still, Prince Fahd faced little censure when he touched down in
Dalbandin, a dusty town near the Afghan border on Wednesday, to be
welcomed by a delegation led by a cabinet minister and including senior
provincial officials.
His reception was a testament, critics say, to the money-driven
magnetism of Saudi influence in Pakistan, and the walk-on role of the
humble bustard in cementing that relationship.
“This is a clear admission of servility to the rich Arabs,” said Pervez
Hoodbhoy, a physics professor and longtime critic of what he calls
“Saudization” in Pakistan. “They come here, hunt with impunity, and are
given police protection in spite of the fact that they are violating
local laws.”
The dispute has focused attention on a practice that started in the
1970s, when intensive hunting in the Persian Gulf nearly rendered the
houbara extinct there, and with it a cherished tradition considered the
sport of kings.
As the houbara migrated from its breeding grounds in Siberia, newly
enriched Persian Gulf royalty flocked to the deserts and fields of
Pakistan, where they were welcomed with open arms by the country’s leaders.
For the Pakistanis, the hunt has become an opportunity to earn money and
engage in a form of soft diplomacy.
Although only 29 foreigners have been permitted houbara licenses this
year, according to press reports, they include some of the wealthiest
and most powerful men in the Middle East, including the kings of Bahrain
and Saudi Arabia, the Emir of Kuwait and the ruler of Dubai.
Their devotion to the houbara can seem mysterious to outsiders. The
bird’s meat is bitter and stringy, and its supposed aphrodisiac
properties are not supported by scientific evidence.
But falcon hunting, and the pursuit of the houbara, occupy a romantic
place in the Bedouin Arab culture.
In Pakistan, the lavish nature of the winter hunts, which take place
largely away from public scrutiny, have become the stuff of legend. In
the early ’90s, it was reported, the Saudi king arrived in Pakistan with
a retinue of dancing camels.
To curry favor with local communities, the Arab hunters have built
roads, schools, madrassas and mosques, as well as several
international-standard airstrips in unlikely places.
The only airport, at Rahim Yar Khan in the south of Punjab Province, is
named after Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahayan, the former ruler of Abu
Dhabi.
In recent times the hunts have also played a role, albeit unwitting, in
the United States’s war against Al Qaeda.
Osama bin Laden took refuge at a houbara hunting camp in western
Afghanistan in the late 1990s, by several accounts, at a time when the
C.I.A. was plotting to assassinate him with a missile strike.
The journalist Steve Coll wrote in his Pulitzer Prize-winning book,
“Ghost Wars,” that American officials declined to take the shot, fearing
that the Arab sheikh who was hosting Bin Laden would have been at risk
of dying in the attack.
For several years starting in 2004, the C.I.A. used an Arab-built
airstrip at Shamsi, a barren desert valley in central Baluchistan, to
launch drone strikes against Islamist militants in Pakistan’s tribal belt.
When news of the American base stirred a scandal in Pakistan’s
Parliament in 2011, the country’s air force chief sought to deflect
blame onto the United Arab Emirates government.
The deserts around Dalbandin, where Prince Fahd landed on Wednesday,
were the site of Pakistan’s first nuclear test explosion in 1998, and
are an established way station for heroin smugglers and Taliban insurgents.
But the growing influence of Gulf Arab countries is not universally
appreciated. Progressive Pakistanis bemoan their conservative influence
on society, and the infusion of petrodollars for jihadi groups.
The hunts have also come under attack. In Baluchistan, where the houbara
is the provincial symbol, some royal hunts had to be curtailed after
Baluch separatist rebels opened fire on hunting parties.
Now the battle has shifted to the capital, Islamabad. The prime
minister, Nawaz Sharif, enjoys close relations with the rulers of Saudi
Arabia, where he spent much of his exile between 2000 and 2007 — one
reason, critics believe, for the indulgence shown toward Prince Fahd.
Mr. Sharif sent his federal planning minister, Ahsan Iqbal, to greet
Prince Fahd in Dalbandin, as well as Baluchistan’s minister for sports
and culture.
“Not a single political leader reacted against illegal hunting by Arab
princes,” Asma Jahangir, a prominent human rights campaigner, posted on
Twitter.
Although Mr. Sharif never confirmed it, Saudi Arabia is widely believed
to have injected $1.5 billion into Mr. Sharif’s government last year to
help prop up the ailing economy. Last year in Islamabad, Mr. Sharif laid
out a lavish welcome for the other Saudi hunting permit holder: Salman
bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud, who last month was inaugurated as king.
The International Union for the Conservation of Nature has termed the
houbara a vulnerable species, and India has banned the hunt. The
Baluchistan court order in November cited Pakistan’s obligation to
international conservation treaties.
Hunt supporters say the houbara population has never been scientifically
surveyed, and complain that the royal visits are being unnecessarily
politicized.
“The foreigners are a blessing, not a problem,” said Ernest Shams of
Houbara Foundation International Pakistan, a charity that works with the
United Arab Emirates government to boost houbara stocks. “They bring so
much money into the country.”
In a bid to overcome the court ban, the Baluchistan government has
lodged an appeal in Pakistan’s Supreme Court that is likely to be heard
on Wednesday, officials in Islamabad said Friday.
Prince Fahd is currently at his hunting camp in Bar Tagzi, surrounded by
his falcons and a contingent of security — and most definitely not
hunting any houbara, according to Pakistani officials.
“They are visiting development sites,” said Obaidullah Jan Babat, an
adviser to the Baluchistan chief minister. “They are not hunting.”
Salman Masood contributed reporting from Islamabad, Pakistan.
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