Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

^ the government till date has not provided any proof of the involvement of India and USA in the situation of balochistan.

Maybe for you the feelings of baloch are not important, but they are important to me (being a part of my country). It was the same mindset which got Pakistan divided once, and now the army is trying its utmost to have it divided again.

The Pakistan army does not need to try the Baloch 'terrorists' as they use kill and dump (on any one they might consider a traitor). Why does this kill and dump not apply on taleban who have killed far more people than these Baloch terrorists?

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Yes the feelings of terrorist BLA is not important for me and shouldn't be for any sane human.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

@snowy_winter - once again (#220) you have pulled in India as the excuse - we all from past challenges that you simply make these baseless allegations and when challenged just repeat the allegation.

When are you going to substantiate it?

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

This is exactly the same attitude the average Baloch has of the Pakistan Army. They consider the Pakistan Army as terrorist and rightly so.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

The Baloch have no voice in Pakistan. I love Balochistan - I have stayed in Gwadar, Turbat, Quetta and the Hingol National Park. I have also stayed in Loralai, Zhob, Ziarat but these areas are mainly Pashtun.

Very few Baloch actually want to be a part of Pakistan. It will be very hard to change their minds. The empty promises by Zardari, Nawaz Sharif will never be fulfilled and the Baloch know it. A reasonable Baloch guy said to me they have not done anything for us in 64 years why will we expect something in the future.

I do not support or would want any area to break away from Pakistan but then again I do not think any area should be forced to stay. If a referendum was held in Balochistan tomorrow asking how many would opt for independence from my experience most Baloch would vote yes.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

The way the killings took place on a checkpost in kharotabad, and dr baqar shah killed (as he did not give the statement which the fc desired) I am not sure which people fc is killing there in the name of bla.

By the way fc is one of the reasons of this conflict as well, the baloch desire a force (consisting of baloch's) to provide security to them. By using the fc the government is playing a dangerous game, as it could lead to tensions between the Pashtuns and baloch's in the province.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

[QUOTE]
[TABLE="class: scheduleTable"]
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12:00

**Al Jazeera World : Balochistan: Pakistan's Other War
**Al Jazeera travels to the remote and dangerous region of Balochistan in southern Pakistan to meet local politicans and militants demanding secession.
[/TR]

[/QUOTE]

Aljazeera will be showing this documentary today at 1200 hrs (GMT) if I am not wrong, I guess it will be worth watching.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

aljazeera’s program on Balochistan in half an hour, link to watch live is:

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

This is the link for the program:

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

People can do all the propaganda in the world....warning of imminent separation of Balochistan, but anybody who has really lived in Balochistan knows that not even 5% of Balochs support separation, not to mention the pushtuns, hazaras, punjabis and urdu-speaking people. Please keep on dreaming !!

The images of thousands of pushtuns dancing on the streets of Quetta the whole night on 14th August is still etched in my memory...........the zeal, the fervor and the love for Pakistan will never let the hideous indian dream of separating balochistan come true !!

For anybody reading these forums, please rest assured......90% of balochs are great people and not to mention that hundreds of thousands of patriotic pushtuns and punjabis and hazaras living in Balochistan. Balochistan is NOT going anywhere, no matter how many planted "documentaries" and "articles" are written. However, I am not saying that the govt. hasn't done any wrong. Now's a great time to try to bring development in Balochistan........I have talked to Balochs living currently in Balochistan and they are saying that the biggest concern for them is that the govt. should provide them with job opportunities above everything else. Asking for forgiveness or making sentimental statements is not what they are interested in. The govt. should provide the common man in balochistan security of life and shud provide them with jobs and that will bring a huge change.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

I wish this was the case! Less than 10% of Baloch support Pakistan probably and even if the tribal leader is pro-pakistani, the younger generation of Baloch are not.

**If a Baloch does not support Pakistan it does not mean he is any less of a great person. In fact we should guive them RESPECT because they are struggling for their rights. if Kashmiris, Palestinians, Chechnyans have legitimate struggles from their oppressors, what makes the Baloch freedom less of a struggle? I would hate to see Balochistan be independent of Pakistan but I woudl feel worse they accepted their 3rds class status in Pakistan

**It is not an Indian dream. It is the dream of the Baloch. Even now you insult them by showing no sympathy for their cause r even understanding of it.

Pashtuns dancing on August 14th has nothingto do with the Baloch cause. If you know anything about Blochistan Pashtuns then you know the strong nationalist tendency many have too.

You really need to start listening to people and get out there and ask how they feel.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

According to the Baloch, 8 bullet ridden bodies have so far been found during the first 5 days of the (Year of Balochistan) 2012.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Nawaz Sharif visits Quetta after 12 years.
http://www.thebalochhal.com/2010/01/nawaz-sharif-to-visit-quetta-today/

Nawaz Sharif to visit Quetta today**http://thebalochhal.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/PAKISTAN_-_Nawaz_Sharif-150x150.jpg

The Baloch Hal News

QUETTA:** Former Prime Minister of Pakistan and the chief of Pakistan Muslim League (PML-Nawaz) Mian Mohammad Nawaz Sharif is scheduled to visit Balochistan capital, Quetta, today (Monday) for the first time in the last 12 years.

According to party officials, the opposition leader would arrive in Quetta from Lahore and will be welcomed by party leaders and activists at Quetta airport. The former prime minister will meet leading Baloch and Pashtun leaders during his visit, including Talal Akbar Bugti, the head of Jamori Watan Party and a son of Nawab Mohammad Akbar Bugti, and Mahmood Khan Achakzai, the president of the Pakhtunkhawa Milli Awami Party (PkMP). He will visit the two leaders at their respective residences in Quetta.

Sharif will discuss the political situation of Balochistan during his meetings with the Baloch and Pakhtun leaders. The visit is being seen as a move by the former prime minister to consolidate his party in the country’s largest province for a future political dispensation. A lot of former allies of Sharif had defected after his removal by Pervez Musharraf in October 1999 and joined the military ruler. Thus, many leaders affiliated with the Q-League may decide to rejoin the PML-N which has bright prospects of coming into power in the future.

During his visit, Sharif will speak with the Organizing Committee of the PML-N at a luncheon hosted by Sardar Yaqoob Nasir, the provincial president of the opposition party. Sharif would also speak to the media during his visit after the lunch. It is expected that several important political figures will announce to join the PML on the eve of Sharif’s visit.

Baloch leader Nawabzada Talal Akbar Bugti will host dinner in the honor of the former prime minister of Pakistan who is also expected to meet other Baloch leaders and Pakhtun tribal elders. Nawaz Sharif has been very vocal in terms of opposing the murder of Nawab Bugti and demanding justice for the family of the slain former governor and the chief minister.

**Party sources said no public gathering would be organized on this occasion due to security reasons. Yet, the PML-N leader would meet a vast range of leaders in the province during his first visit in the past 12 years. Sharif had cancelled his visits to Balochistan at least five times before owing the security concerns and personal engagements.
**
Meanwhile, a senior leader of the Pakhtunkhawa Milli Awami Party Lawyers’ Forum, Samanadar Khan Kasi advocate, announced on Sunday in a press conference at the Quetta Press Club to join the Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz.

He was flanked by Sardar Yaqoob Nasir, a former member of the National Assembly and the provincial president of the N-League, Khuda-e-Noor, provincial organizer of the PML-N and other party leaders.

Speaking at the press conference, Kasi said, Pakistan was engulfed with multiple challenges at the moment and there was an urgent need for all the citizens of the country to sink all differences and struggle to unite Pakistan. He said Mian Mohammad Nawaz Sharif was a leader who possessed the ability to take the country out of challenges and threats of disintegration.

PML-N provincial president Yaqoob Nasir said that the people had been disappointed with the government of Pakistan People’s Party due to its ‘poor performance’. Nawaz Sharif was a hope to survive the future of Pakistan. When asked about his opinion about changing the name of North Western Frontier Province (NWFP), Nasir said he personally supported the idea of changing that province’s name but his opinion contradicted with the party policy.

“An internal committee has been formed to look into the matter of changing the name of NWFP. We are bound to respect whatever decision is made by the committee,” he said.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

http://www.thebalochhal.com/2011/12/editorial-rehman-malik-is-not-a-foreign-agent/

Editorial: Rehman Malik Is Not a Foreign Agent

In scathing criticism directed at the federal Interior Minister Rehman Malik, a senior minister in the Balochistan government asked during a session of the Balochistan Assembly if the former was an agent of the foreign governments. Maulana Abdul Wasey, the senior minister from Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, while commenting on Mr. Malik’s consistent hostile and offensive statements in flagrant support of the military operation and violation of human rights in Balochistan, said the minister’s attitude had generated speculations that he was not Pakistan’s minister but an agent of the United States, India or Israel tasked to alienate his own people.

A short and direct answer to the Maulana’s question, whether or not Mr. Malik is a foreign agent, is an emphatic no. Rehman Malik is a patriotic Pakistan whose commitment with the Pakistani army and links with its intelligence agencies are beyond any doubt.

Rehman Malik’s derogatory attitude to the Baloch people was also highlighted by former chief minister Sardar Attaullah Mengal during his recent meeting with ex-prime minister Mian Mohammad Nawaz Sharif in Karachi. The veteran Baloch leader pointed out how Malik added salt to the injuries of the victims of the conflict. In another interview with Dawn News, the elderly Baloch leader said negotiations between Balochistan and the federal government were out of question in the midst of confrontational and humiliating remarks by the interior minister in response to the Baloch demands.

**Rehman Malik continuously discredits the Baloch nationalist movement by blaming India, Afghanistan and ‘other foreign forces’ for fomenting tensions in the province. He also categorically denies the involvement of the country’s intelligence agencies in the enforced disappearance, torture and killing of the Baloch youths. The minister says Islamabad will continue its operations in Balochistan to establish the ‘writ of the government’ until armed Baloch nationalists totally abandon their struggle.
**

The minister, on his part, has totally failed, despite repeated requests by the media, to produce any evidence of foreign assistance to the Baloch nationalist movement. He even does not know the accurate number of the people who have disappeared from Balochistan since 2004 because he still insists that no one is missing. According to his version, the government has safely resurfaced all the missing persons. So, there is no issue of disappeared people at all, he says.

Calling Mr. Malik a foreign agent is in fact absolute insult to all foreign “agents” of positive change. We remember how the Inspector General of the Frontier Corps (FC) Major General Ubaidullah Khan, had once termed the Human Rights Watch an agent of foreign governments. The non-local-non-Baloch FC chief had actually reacted to a strong-worded report of the global human rights watchdog which held the FC responsible for many violations of human rights in the province.

Hence, ‘foreign agents’ are in fact the only remaining friends of Baloch and Rehman Malik does not surely qualify to hold this humane title. **Today, the people of Balochistan look at foreign organizations, such as the Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, the Guardian and BBC (Urdu Service), New York Times Washington Post and the Committee to Protect Journalists as their ultimate sources of hope to attract the international community toward the injustices being committed to the people of Balochistan.

Rehman Malik simply can’t be a foreign agent because he is devoid of respect for humanity. As a matter of fact, the world outside Pakistan is largely a civilized and respectful one where citizens’ basic human rights are recognized and protected.** The minister is no one in a country where the army runs a state within the state. If Mr. Malik has managed to simultaneously secure his life as well as the portfolio he holds then he should be considered as an extra-achiever. After all, his words and actions do not come from him. They are the words and deeds of the army which the poor minister is dependently compelled to deliver.

The actions of the Pakistan army inside Balochistan contradict with whatever ideology and core principles it believes in. If the custodians of the borders affirm allegiance to Islam, then there is no endorsement in 114 chapters of the Quran for killing and dumping innocent teenagers.

Besides losing the political ground in Balochistan, Islamabad has miserably lost a moral battle against secular Baloch. It is insignificant what answers General Musharraf, General Kayani or Rehman Malik will have twenty years down the line when orphaned Baloch children and widowed women will meet them. What should worry them are future confessions by their own grandchildren admitting how ashamed they are of their grandparents’ brutalities in Balochistan even in the 21st century.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Nawaz Shareef did a wnderful job at Quetta. Talked with Baluch leaders and expressed good views .
Nawaz offers to host all-party seminar to solve Balochistan’s problems](Redirect Notice sharif balochistan&source=newssearch&cd=1&ved=0CC8QqQIwAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Ftribune.com.pk%2Fstory%2F317422%2Fnawaz-offers-to-host-all-party-seminar-to-solve-balochistans-problems%2F&ctbm=nws&ctbs=qdr%3Ad&ei=aqwGT4ESyqGIB4LayJsJ&usg=AFQjCNFzDKS4ZZCN5AdZMGEo1UJqzPCBvw&cad=rja)‎

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

20 years from now and indians will still be blowing the trumpet that Balochistan is going to break away. Nothing is going to happen. Period. The bullet-riddled bodies are the bodies of indian paid hindu-baloch terrorists who do target killing of innocent people.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Of course nothing will happen. The uprising will be crushed and more resentment aimed at Pakistan.

No offence but you sound very young. You have this boring Jazbati Pakistan Zaindabad all Green flag nature which is all built on an idealistic and unrealistic view of how things are. Your nationalism is sweet and endearing but it is far from the reality.

There is no proof of Indian involvement.

**Are the Baloch really that docile and stupid that they would keep living as SECOND CLASS citizens in their home country, exploited by people from far away?

People like you have a very condescending view of the situation. When you blame the Indians you actually attack the nature of the Baloch. Do you really think India could have created this mess? As a Baloch friend of mine said "What has this great Pakistan done for us? It it has not in 65 years, then why we think it will improve now?"

Dont blame the mess on the Indians, blame your great Pakistan's politicians and Military! **

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Yesterday State Department (United States) had asked for questions to be asked from them (through out the world) regarding the issues that concern people so that they could respond to them. The State dept spokesperson had to respond to those queries. Most of the questions were related to Balochistan, this week they did not respond. But I am sure its not far away when this issue will start getting international spotlight. The army can continue living in its cuckooland.

http://www.nextgov.com/nextgov/ng_20120106_5894.php?oref=topnews
State fields Twitter questionsBY [EMAIL=“[email protected]”]JOSEPH MARKS 01/06/2012

After her daily press briefing Friday, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland took questions from a new audience – several hundred Tweeters spread across a dozen or more nations.
State solicited questions under the #AskState hash tag as part of its 21st Century Statecraft month and is accepting them in English and nine other languages. Nuland plans to answer five questions after her press briefings every Friday.

The first week’s questions were submitted in English, Arabic, Chinese, Farsi and French. Nuland said she will answer questions from five other language feeds next week. Those are Hindi, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish and Urdu.

The department hasn’t decided how it will divvy up questions in future weeks, but is aiming to make sure all the language feeds are well-represented, a State official who was not authorized to speak on the record told Nextgov](Nextgov/FCW - Federal Technology News and Analysis for IT Managers & Acquisition Teams).

“We’re looking to select questions that have a great prevalence [on the Twitter feeds],” the official said. “We obviously can’t answer all the questions, but we’re not looking for softballs. We’re looking for questions people care about and those are sort of all over the map.”

Questions Tweeted under the English #AskState hash tag in advance of Friday’s briefing spread far and wide. Those questions did touch on some big-ticket issues such as sanctions against Iran, but the most Tweeted and re-Tweeted questions were outside the foreign policy mainstream, according to a Nextgov analysis of all 105 questions.

**The most popular topic, according to that analysis, was U.S policy toward theseparatist Pakistani region of Balochistan, which garnered 28 Tweeted questions. That campaign was clearly led by a few busy Tweeters. One, who Tweeted under the handle @faizBaluch, urged: “All baloch tweeples: must participate in the following event.”

**
**The hash tag results prompted Associated Press reporter Matthew Lee to joke at the opening of Nuland’s regular press conference Friday that he had several burning question about Balochistan but didn’t want to upstage the Twitter briefing.

**
**“Since it looks like you’re going to be answering questions about Balochistan later this afternoon, then the briefing’s over; I won’t ask about them,” Lee said.

**
Nuland did not answer any questions about Balochistan during the Twitter briefing, nor did she speak about the second most Tweeted topic under the English hash tag: the future of opponents of Iran’s theocratic regime now based at Camp Ashraf in Iraq. Supporters of the Ashraf camp regularly protest outside the State Department and Tweeted several videos of their protests under the hash tag Thursday.

She did respond to the third most popular issue Tweeted under the English hash tag, which asked why the United States hasn’t done more to remove Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, whom American officials have said is responsible for a genocide in that nation’s Darfur region and whom the International Criminal Court has charged with crimes against humanity.

U.S. officials are actively seeking a diplomatic solution in Sudan, Nuland said, and don’t believe a military effort to remove al-Bashir would be effective.

An Arabic-language Tweet asked, “about the U.S. refusal to intervene militarily to stop the massacre against Syrian civilians,” according to Nuland’s paraphrase. She responded that the United States supports a peaceful resolution to the protests against President Basher Assad’s regime and peaceful demonstrators have asked U.S. officials not to intervene militarily.

The other questions Nuland responded to included:

  • A Chinese-language Tweet asked which was more important: maintaining U.S. military power or supporting human rights. [She said they’re both important.]

  • A Farsi Tweet asked about U.S. aid to help Iranians subvert their regime’s tightening control over citizens’ Internet access. [Nuland gave a rundown of U.S. resources spent on combating Internet censorship globally and condemned Iranian censorship.]

  • A French Tweet asked whether new U.S. defense spending cuts will affect U.S. commitments under NATO. [She said they would not.]

More than 500 Tweets came in under the different language #AskState hash tags in the 24 hours before Nuland’s Twitter briefing, according to department officials. Those Tweets reached roughly 3.7 million followers of State’s numerous Twitter accounts, she said.

State manages about 190 social media accounts spread across Facebook, Twitter and other sites. Those include about 90 accounts managed by department officials or divisions and about 100 more managed by individual embassies.

The department has planned several other digital events during January, including a live video chat for international journalists and bloggers with Senior Adviser for Innovation Alec Ross and a Twitter question-and-answer session with the U.S. embassy in Haiti focused on that nation’s recovery from its 2010 earthquake.

Stay up-to-date with federal technology news alerts and analysis - sign up for Nextgov’s email newsletters.

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

Lolz.......please keep on dreaming !! Balochs living in Balochistan and who have been involved in the political struggle of Baloch rights are annoyed at terrorists like BLA. They openly admit that India is involved and are angry at indian backed organizations like BLA who they say have done more damage to their cause rather than support it. For example, they say that now their genuine political movement for the rights of Balochs has been tainted with blood and now some Baloch areas live in constant fear because of the evil doings of BLA. They said they had more security and leeway before these idiots ran around butchering everyone who disagrees to them.

And one more thing, BLA has been killing everyone who disagrees with their psychotic mindset (indian-induced) and this includes killing veteran Baloch nationalist politicians and leaders.

But of course, you don't know any of this.....most of your info is based on planted articles. Please keep on dreaming and we can come back here a couple of years later and then we will see whether Balochistan has progressed or has become bangladesh.

No more comments from my side..... so please feel free to post "articles" and "news"........

Re: Balochistan crisis & its resolution!

**Pakistan army is using militias to fight their wars in FATA and Balochistan, I wonder what will happen when the wars finally end. What will these militias do (disband themselves) or should we be prepared for long civil wars? The result of militias is infront of us in Iraq.http://www.humanrights.asia/news/ahrc-news/AHRC-STM-005-2012#.TwgRMm5orXE.twitter

PAKISTAN: Army creates an organization to kill intellectuals and activists in Balochistan, in the name of peace**

January 6, 2012
**A****n organization claiming to work for the restoration of peace in Balochistan province has confessed to the killings of many activists, and has announced its intention to kill 35 more activists on its hit list in recent weeks. The organization has three activists in its custody and announces that at any time their bodies will be gifted to the nationalist movement of Balochistan. There has been no action from the authorities against the organization however.
**

It is alleged that the organization, Tehreek-e-Nefaz-e-Aman Balochistan (TNAB; movement for the restoration of peace in Balochistan), has been formed by secret agencies, particularly by the ISI, to crush the nationalist movement, which is against military intervention in the province and does not allow the people of Balochistan to control their rich natural resources.

**Tehreek-e-Nefaz-e-Aman Balochistan is said to be the armed wing of Mutahida Mahaz Balochistan (United Front Balochistan), a political party headed by Siraj Raisani, the brother of provincial chief minister Aslam Raisani. The armed wing claims to have support from the custodians of Pakistan to restore peace in Balochistan. The chief minister is also not happy with the misuse of powers by the army and Frontier Corps (FC) in dealing with the law and order situation and his younger brother opted to disassociate himself from his brother’s politics.

The Pakistani armed forces have conducted military operations in Balochistan five times since 1948, the creation of Pakistan, and never allowed the people of the province to have autonomy over their own resources. Human rights organizations report that every district has cantonments running detention centers and torture cells to suppress students and activists. Since 2001, the military is very much present in the province. Though the government of President Asif announced in 2008 that it would withdraw the army from Balochistan after the impeachment of former president General Musharraf, the army remained and its Para-Military force, the FC was handed control of the province’s law and order situation, as well as policing powers. **

**The image of the army and FC was tarnished due to the disappearances of hundreds of Baloch people, their extrajudicial killings, the policy of kill and dump, torture cells and the abduction of women and activists. The military has now changed its policy and created an organization in the name of peace restoration, which is in fact assigned to identify the activists, intellectuals and professionals supporting Balochistan’s independence movement, abduct and kill them, which the FC and army cannot do in the presence of strong hatred throughout the country.

On November 5, 2011 the TNAB accepted responsibility for the killing of two abducted Baloch activists and said they were holding another four people who would be killed soon. Three of these were killed in December and their bullet riddled bodies were found abandoned in the Dalbandin area. They were killed in the same fashion as FC and intelligence agencies kill abducted persons, with many torture marks on their bodies and a bullet hole in the forehead.

Calling Baloch pro-independence activists the enemies of God, the group vows to kill all apostates.** The TNAB has admitted to the killing of many other civilians, including:
Dr Mir Ahmad Marri, a resident of Kahan, Balochistan whose body was discovered from Dasht area of Balochistan on November 12, 2011. He had migrated to Hyderabad, Sindh province, and was living there with his family. On September 20, 2011, he was abducted by Pakistan security personnel, and was listed missing until his body was found. He had many torture marks on his body and one bullet in his forehead. A written chit was found in his pocket, saying ‘a gift to Baloch nationalists who are enemies of Pakistan’.
Tariq Bangulzai and Mehmood Bangulzai, activists, were also killed along with two of their cousins and young Wahid aka Balach Baloch, and the TNAB claimed responsibility for these in November 2011. They also accepted responsibility for killing a man in Khuzdar, alleging him to be part of the Baloch National Front (BNF) and Lashkar -e- Balochistan, the armed wing of BNF.
Aziz Bangulzai and Nabi Buz Bangulzai of BNF, fighting for the political rights of Balochistan state, were abducted and killed, and TNAB took responsibility for this in October, 2011. It further noted that it was still holding four persons, who would be killed soon, and many other Baloch activists would be targeted one by one.

**

http://www.humanrights.asia/news/ahrc-news/resolveuid/623dc6d2ab0d21c3af1c6579171d04ca/image_preview

TNAB issued a threat to kill all the family members of an intellectual, Mr. Hafeez Hassan Abadi
**
**A Pakistani news agency, NNI, has reported that the TNAB has recently threatened to kill every single member of Baloch intellectual and writer Hafeez Hasan Abadi’s family. Hafeez is a famous writer and columnist, writing on human rights abuses by the military and state agencies, as well as actively campaigning for the release of disappeared persons.

In a statement, TNAB’s spokesperson Ghazi Khan Baloch said his group will target Hafeez Hasanabadi wherever they see him.** Khan declared Mr. Hafeez to be a blasphemer and infidel, and hence liable to be killed. According to the statement, ‘‘We have gathered all the necessary information about Hafeez’s family. We can target them anytime and kill them in most brutal way.’’

Hafeez Khan left the country in 2009 and went to Russia, where he was called and warned to come back to Pakistan. When he left for Norway, he was threatened with the murder of his family members unless he returned to Pakistan. His two sons were stopped by unknown persons in plainclothes, claiming to be TNAB members. They were threatened with death unless their father showed up.

The Balochistan Union of Journalists has issued a statement calling for the protection of the family members of Hafeez Hasan Abadi. The leaders of the Union Essa Tareen and Secretary Hamadullah have condemned threats received by senior journalist and anchor Hamid Mir and family members of Hafeez, and demanded the military establishment to take notice of the matter. They claimed that 20 journalists had so far been killed in Balochistan alone and more than half of them were targeted allegedly by intelligence agencies and their hand-picked militant organisations.

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) is gravely concerned by the threats to Hafeez Hassan Abadi’s family and urges the government and authorities to act quickly and protect them. The government should also prosecute all security force officials who are using militant groups to unleash on the nationalist movements. In particular, the AHRC is aware that Islamic extremists groups have recently accelerated their deadly attacks against Baloch masses to counter the pro-independence movement. They have splashed acid on the faces of several Baloch women, including five female teachers in Quetta. These militant outlets are said to be financed by the ISI and trained with the collaboration of Frontier Corps and Military Intelligence in Balochistan. Their main tasks include counter-insurgency, spread of Talibanization, sectarian violence, Killings of Hazaras and Shias, attacks on NATO supply routes and targeting journalists and lawyers.

The situation in Balochistan shows that there is total collapse of rule of law and impunity to law enforcement authorities has become the order of the day. The AHRC urges the government to prosecute organizations openly threatening the people of Balochistan for demanding their civil and political rights.