When Wadera Noor Ali Chakrani finally stepped forward at Pakistan House, flanked by more than a hundred men who once followed him into the mountains, the moment felt less like a spectacle and more like the closing of a long, exhausting chapter.
Their weapons, laid out in a muted row, were not the centrepiece. It was the expressions-tired, cautious, almost relieved-that said more than any official speech could. For years, Chakrani’s name was woven into the region’s conflict narrative. His tribe-the Chakranis-holds deep roots in Dera Bugti, and his decision to abandon the insurgency is something that even seasoned observers quietly admit is significant.
Not because one man shapes a conflict, but because this particular surrender disrupts an older rhythm: recruitment pipelines thinning, safe routes shrinking, a sense that a once-steady drumbeat of militancy may finally be slowing.
In Dera Bugti, the mountains are familiar with the sound of gunfire. But on that morning, they absorbed a different sound: silence.
Sui is not an ordinary town. It pumps life into households across the country, yet its own people have lived under the shadow of conflict longer than most Pakistanis can remember. Stability here is not simply a local matter; it echoes into matters of energy, economics, and national confidence.
The sight of former fighters setting down weapons is therefore more than a ceremony-it is a recalibration of the region’s internal balance, a tentative shift that may open the way to development projects long stalled by insecurity. If the moment is handled wisely, Sui’s long-promised prosperity might finally travel beyond pipeline routes and reach the homes around them.
What makes a man who once embraced the insurgency decide to walk back into public life?
Sui is not an ordinary town. It pumps life into households across the country, yet its own people have lived under the shadow of conflict longer than most Pakistanis can remember.
Ask locally, and you receive a spectrum of answers. Some speak of fatigue. Others are disillusioned. A few mention foreign handlers who grew distant once their agendas shifted.
Most, however, point to something quieter: families urging sons and brothers to return before the mountains claimed them entirely; mothers praying for doors to open instead of coffins.
Chakrani’s return is not just a political development-it is a social one. In the villages of Dera Bugti, elders interpreted it as a signal that perhaps the old narratives of “resistance” have lost their gravitational pull. Younger men, who once romanticised the idea of armed struggle, now speak of education, stability, and the simple dignity of predictable days.
Pakistan has, over the years, committed to a policy that separates irreconcilable actors from those misled or exploited. The approach has produced high-profile returns before-former militants who chose dialogue over further isolation.
Chakrani and his group join that lineage, though each case is unique. Reintegration, after all, is an arduous process. It must be credible, humane, and sustained; otherwise, today’s gesture can turn into tomorrow’s disappointment. But when reintegration succeeds, it does something rare: it interrupts the cycle of inherited grievances.
And that, more than any single surrender, is what could reshape Balochistan’s security landscape.
Scenes of surrendered fighters often generate instant headlines. What follows usually determines whether the story becomes one of renewal or relapse.
If the government introduces structured pathways for jobs, education, healthcare, and the economic revival of affected communities, the surrender could become a genuine turning point. If it doesn’t, the moment risks dissolving into symbolism. The people of Dera Bugti, pragmatic and resilient, are aware of this. Many express cautious optimism, tempered by years of promises that arrived too late-or not at all. But some hope has returned to the conversation.
In the quiet after the ceremony, a question hung in the air: What now for those still holding on to the insurgency?
The message carried by the Chakrani men was not triumphant but reflective. “We are done with the fear,” one former fighter murmured to a reporter. “Our children deserve a life we never had the courage to choose.” This sentiment may travel further than any political argument.
Not everyone in the mountains will listen. But the fact that some are listening marks a shift worth noting.
Dera Bugti has seen many cycles-conflict, calm, relapse, reinvention. Yet this surrender feels different in one crucial way: the choice appears to have come from within the community, not imposed from without. Whether it becomes a watershed moment or merely another footnote will depend on what follows:
The presence of schools where there were none, the hum of clinics with real medicine, the dignity of work, the steadying force of infrastructure and opportunity. For now, the region finds itself at a threshold-not of triumph, but of possibility.a
And sometimes, in places familiar with conflict, possibility itself is a rare and powerful thing.
The writer is a freelance columnist.