Telegram
From the Consulate General in Karachi to the Department of
State/1/
/1/
Source: National Archives, RG 59, Central Files 1970-73, REF PAK. Secret; Priority; Exdis. Repeated to Islamabad,
Lahore,
Dacca,
New
Delhi,
Calcutta,
USUN, and US Mission
Geneva.
Karachi, May 22, 1971,
2050Z.
1186. From the Ambassador. Subj: East Pakistan Refugees in India. Ref: State 085973,/2/ Islamabad 04872,/3/ (Notal); State 87878;/4/ State 089635/5/ (Notal).
/2/ In
telegram 85973 to Islamabad, May 17, the Department instructed the Embassy to
augment the President's May 7 letter to Yahya by
expressing concern that the continuing refugee flow from East Pakistan into
India was not only creating a humanitarian problem but also posed a threat to
regional stability. In the Department's view the refugee problem would continue
until the reestablishment of more normal conditions in East Pakistan and until there was
some movement toward an accommodation with the Bengali opposition. The Embassy
was instructed to encourage a statement by the Government of Pakistan to the
effect that it would welcome the return of refugees and would grant a general
amnesty to those who had fled to India. (Ibid.)
/3/
Ambassador Farland addressed the question of the
distribution of relief assistance in East Pakistan in telegram 4872 from
Islamabad, May 19. He noted that
there was a history of foreign personnel serving in East Pakistan identifying with
Bengali political aspirations, and added that Yahya's
government did not want to be in a position of carrying out military operations
in East
Pakistan
while foreigners took credit for relief work. Farland
felt that international agencies could monitor relief operations without having
to distribute food and other supplies. (Ibid., SOC 10
PAK)
/4/
See footnote 2, Document 51.
/5/ On May
21 Sisco sent telegram 89635 to Farland
in Karachi where he was scheduled
to meet with Yahya on the following day. He
encouraged Farland to urge Yahya
to make the type of public statement cited in footnote 2 above. (National
Archives, RG 59, Central Files 1970-73, REF PAK)
1. I met
with President Yahya Khan at the President's house in
Karachi on Saturday, May 22 at
1830 hours. During hour and half long conversation which ensued, I discussed
with Yahya, among other subjects which
are reported by septels, the urgent matter of East Pakistan refugees in India.
2. This
subject was introduced by my comments to the effect that the continuing influx
of refugees from East Pakistan into India currently appeared to
be the single most likely cause of escalation of Indo-Pak tensions. I pointed
out that GOI's current estimates indicated that there
were now over two and a half million East Pakistani refugees in India and that the total was
being swelled by approximately one hundred thousand additional refugees per
day. I noted that, while these figures might well be subject to further
scrutiny, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees representative, having recently
completed survey of the refugee situation, had termed the refugee problem as he
saw it to be "monumental" and one which required a major
international relief effort.
3. After
further general discussion of the subject, I pointed out to Yahya
that the USG is very much concerned by the continuation of the refugee flow
from East
Pakistan
into India for two reasons: (a)
the broad humanitarian aspects of the matter; and (b) the threat to regional
stability which the refugee presence and current daily increase thereto poses.
I made note that the possibility of communal disorders in the refugee camp
areas is a very real and pressing danger. The conversation continued with my
observation that without the creation of normal conditions in the East, a
renewed sense of physical security among the Hindu community,/6/ and a patent
movement with substance behind it toward a peaceful political accommodation, it
could be reasonably expected that the refugee problem will continue. I added
that we have been urging restraint on the Indians, emphasizing the need to
depoliticize the refugee question. It is our impression that the Indians want
the people to return to their homes and are deeply concerned about the
potentially harmful impact of the refugee influx, especially on West Bengal.
/6/ Farland also took up with Yahya
on May 22 the "sensitive issue" of the reported mistreatment of
Hindus in East
Pakistan
by the Pakistani Army. Farland warned that if such
reports were accurate, publication in the United States of accounts of the
persecution of Hindus in East Pakistan would make it difficult
for the Nixon administration to continue to support Pakistan. A greater danger, Farland said, was the reaction of India to the grievances Hindu
refugees were undoubtedly airing in West Bengal. Farland
warned that the mistreatment of Hindus in East Pakistan would strengthen the
hands of those in India who favored military
action against Pakistan. Yahya
responded that Farland had apparently been listening
to some "overly provocative comments" broadcast by the Voice of
America and the British Broadcasting System. Farland
said that his information came from the Consulate in Dacca which had received the
reports from "authenticated sources." Yahya
assured Farland that if Hindus were being mistreated
"it was not taking place under government policy or government
sanction" and he would rectify the matter. (Telegram 1187 from
Karachi, May 22; ibid., POL 23-9 PAK)
4. With
this as background I strongly urged that the President take the constructive
step of personally issuing a statement to the effect that GOP was seized with
the matter of international humanitarian relief assistance; was actively
involved in improving food distribution in East Pakistan; was attempting to
effect political reconciliation through the East wing; and would seriously
welcome the early return of refugees, a welcome enforced by the grant of
general amnesty to those free of capital crime who had fled to India. I stated
that coupled with measures toward peaceful accommodation with Bengalis and the
return to more normal conditions in East Pakistan such a statement, emanating
from President himself, could serve as an important element in encouraging
refugees, including Hindus, to return to their homes in the East. It would also
testify to the GOP's good intentions with regard to finding a resolution to the
refugee problem. Also I made note of the fact that by putting the above courses
of action in one general statement he would have real impact thus helping GOP
world-wide position much more dramatically than dribbling out various actions
on piecemeal basis. Yahya was left well aware that
this suggestion was made with idea in mind of helping him improve his and his
government's whole public posture throughout the world.
5. Having
said this, I indicated that the USG would be interested in any views that the
GOP might have on how the refugee flow could be checked.
6.
President Yahya said that he tended to disagree with GOI's current estimate that there were now over two and
one-half million East Pakistani refugees in India, but that the GOP was
aware of the fact that a substantial number of people had crossed the border
and that the problem was both real and substantial. He went on to argue however
that over the past three or four years there had been an influx of
"refugees" into East Pakistan in a number approximating a half a
million people and that this movement had neither been admitted by India nor
bemoaned by the world press.
7.
President Yahya stated that he appreciated fully the
USG's concern in the refugee flow for the reasons which I had stated. He was defensive,
however, concerning my observed possibility of communal disorders in the
refugee camp areas, saying that GOI made so little of communal disorders that
it had found it convenient not even to answer his government's notes of
protests. Also, while discussing this subject, President Yahya
reiterated the GOP's version of India's involvement in the
secessionist movement and in armed infiltration into East Pakistan.
8. I again
told President Yahya that I was aware of his
government's position but that irrespective of the causes, the problem existed
and the refugee flow must be checked. He agreed that ramifications which could
ensue from this situation were patently of great seriousness, and he indicated
that he recognized the validity of my observations. He alluded to his comments
made earlier in the conversation (reported septel/7/-President Yahya's observations on Pakistan political situation)
and said that an earnest effort at peaceful political accommodation would be
undertaken; this, he observed, should have an ameliorating effect on the
problem. He added that he hoped the United States would continue to urge
restraint on India since the arms and ammunition supplied to infiltrators, both
Indian and Bengalis, and the training being given in guerrilla warfare in camps
along and just inside the Indian border, all combined to prevent a return to
normalcy.
/7/
Document 53.
9.
Regarding the issuance of a statement as suggested (see para
4), President Yahya first asked what I thought of his
comments issued in the morning press./8/ I told him that, in my opinion, they
lacked substance regarding the approach to the principal question, and that the
thrust appeared to be directed primarily towards an attack on India. I then reiterated the
key points of my suggestion and again urged it upon him. President Yahya indicated that I had [made] my point and that he
would think seriously upon it.
/8/ A
statement issued by Yahya on May 21 encouraged
refugees to return to their homes in East Pakistan where, he assured them,
law and order had been restored. Yahya accused India of exploiting the
refugee problem in order to justify interference in Pakistan's internal affairs.
(Telegram 5044 from Islamabad, May 22; National Archives, RG 59, Central Files
1970-73, REF PAK)
Luppi