Has Another Baloch Student Been Forcibly Disappeared by Pakistani Forces?
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- Enforced disappearances are on the rise in Balochistan.
- The Counter Terrorism Department is implicated in multiple abductions.
- Community leaders are advocating for unity and awareness.
- The Baloch National Movement plays a crucial role in documenting these violations.
- International attention is growing regarding human rights in the region.
Quetta, Dec 12 (NationPress) A Baloch student has been forcibly abducted by Pakistani forces in Balochistan, amidst a growing trend of enforced disappearances in the region, according to a prominent human rights organization. Paank, the Human Rights Department of the Baloch National Movement, reported that on December 7, Noor Bakhsh, a student from Killi Qambrani, located in the Saryab area of Quetta, was taken from his residence by the Counter Terrorism Department of Pakistan.
The organization pointed out that on December 6, another student, Aftab Baloch, was also abducted by the CTD. Furthermore, on December 7, Ibrar Qambrani, another student, along with a laborer named Ali Dost Qambrani, were seized from their homes by the same department.
In a seminar on International Human Rights Day, Sabiha Baloch, a Central Leader of the Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC), noted that while the Universal Declaration of Human Rights guarantees fundamental rights to all, the people of Balochistan are denied even their most basic right to life.
Sabiha emphasized that amidst extreme oppression from Pakistani authorities, the Baloch community must “preserve their ideology, raise awareness, and reinforce unity starting at home and within their communities.”
She asserted that Pakistan employs violence, intimidation, tribal conflicts, and drug usage to stifle the Baloch people's struggle against human rights violations.
Furthermore, Sabiha condemned the imprisonment of BYC members on fabricated charges, alongside ongoing incidents of enforced disappearances, torture, nighttime raids, and forced displacements across Balochistan.
She urged the community to identify and socially isolate those collaborating with the Pakistani-backed death squads, accusing them of causing division and perpetuating oppression.
In conclusion, she appealed to all sectors of Baloch society to unify against violence and genocide, to advocate for the disappeared, and to persist in their resistance until the Baloch reclaim “unity, humanity, and control over their land.”