The
Makran coast is Balochistan's southern strip and stretches
for 754 kms. Long sandy beaches, rugged promontories and tidal
creeks characterize the coast-line. There ranges of hills,
rising to over 1500 meters (5000feet), run parallel
to the coast: the Coastal Makran Range, 30 kms inland; the
Central Makran Range, 130 kms inland; and the Siahan Range,
200 kms away from the sea. There is very little rain in the
Makran region; the few villages and towns along the coast
and between the hills are sustained by spring water.
Many
of the Makran people are dark-skinned and have African features.
They are probably descended from slaves brought by Arab merchants
to the subcontinent. They subsist on fishing, date farming
and camel breeding. Most of the men work part-time in the
gulf state and Oman, and send money home to their families.
Alexander
the great marched half his army home along the inhospitable
Makran coast in 325 BC, and Muhammad bin Qasim came from Baghdad
to Sindh through Makran in 711 AD. The Makranis stood firm
against the Mughals, but bowed nominally to the British Raj.
It is only since 1971 that some effort has been made to develop
the region.
There is no road along the coast, but daily flights connect
the four main coastal towns of Ormara, Pasni, Gwadar and Jiwani
with Karachi, and there are flights to Quetta three times
a week, Gwadar and Jiwani, both picturesque towns flanked
by cliffs and beeches, belonged t o Oman for about 200 years.
The Khan of Kallat gave them as a present to the sultan in
the 18th century, and in 1958 they were sold back to Pakistan.
Ormara is currently being developed as a major port.
Turbat,
the divisional headquarters for Makran, is a small inland
town near the hills, with little to recommend it but its 300
varieties of dates. Turbat is accessible by a rough road from
Lasbela, and by daily flights from Karachi and Quetta. Panjgur,
the principal date-growing area further north, can also be
reached by air. The track from Khuzdar to Panjgur is very
rough.