PKPolitics Discuss » Current Issues

Baluchistan.The biggest part of Pakistan

(73 posts)
  1. Anwer Kamal
    Member

  2. bsobaid
    Member

    Establishment is screwing up again big time and thier ghulaams siddiquis irfan and talat hussains keep blaming the baloch.

    Balochistan is the litmus test of establishment kee ghulami.

    I am glad to see ch iftikhaar taking notice.
    Central government also took an initiative with aghaz.e.huqooq balochistan but establishment ne foren hee onn ko apni auqat yaad dilaa dee and centre government sat quiet with tail between thier legs.

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Mar 2011 4:15 #
  3. toamin
    member

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Mar 2011 4:27 #
  4. Anwer Kamal
    Member

  5. bsobaid
    Member

    Tieing baloch problem with musharraf is non.sense.

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Mar 2011 4:31 #
  6. Hussain Farooqui
    Member

    No sensible strategy is being adopted to save the integrity of our country. There are so many uprisings in India also, but all are being handled sensibly.

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Mar 2011 6:06 #
  7. "I am glad to see ch iftikhaar taking notice"

    Oh that is bvllsh!t! Kvttay ka bacha Chaudhry Iftikhar is pulling a fast one. He knows everything there is to know (remember he is from Balochistan) and yet he has done zilch though he had years. SC under him has done ZILCH as reported AGAIN yesterday:
    No arrests made over Balochistan target killings: Justice Javed

    Most telling was this observation by Justice Javed:

    One of the safe houses of the agencies is near the judges’ enclosure, Justice Javed Iqbal said, adding that intelligence agencies’ safe houses are guest houses and not torture chambers.

    And these guys are going to provide justice???????

    BTW Here is the previous thread:
    The Restless Balochistan

    And here is an editorial from a local paper from a few days back:
    EDITORIAL: Balochistan cannot suffer anymore

    Trouble has hit a new high in Balochistan. On Wednesday, the capital city of Quetta received three rockets in different parts of the city from a nearby mountain range resulting in the death of some four people and injuries to another 18. The first target was a traffic-heavy area where a roundabout, Saryab Pathakh, is located. Two other rockets were fired and hit two houses but, thankfully, no injuries were reported. In addition to these attacks, the bodies of two missing Baloch men were found in the Lasbela district. These men had gone missing some five months ago from Gwadar and Vindar respectively; they have now been found in much the same way many missing Baloch are recovered: mutilated and decomposed bodies. On the same day, the Quetta Express was bombed. Balochistan Governor Nawab Zulfiqar Ali Magsi said that he did not see any progress in talks with the “angry Baloch” who were engaged in a struggle to attain their human, social, economic and political rights. He also said that some headway could only be made after the next general elections with a new leadership making the effort necessary to resolve the abysmal situation.

    Meanwhile, as Balochistan keeps discovering and burying its sons and daughters, Prime Minister Gilani does not deviate from his usual rhetoric. Addressing a delegation led by Balochistan Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani on Tuesday, he once again assured that all efforts would be taken to improve the security situation in the province with closer coordination between the federal and provincial governments — words we have heard all too many times before. Citing the Balochistan Package, he ‘reassured’ that all possible directives for the start of different development projects would be issued. This gives rise to the question: it has been over a year since the package was introduced as a solution to all Baloch woes; why on earth is it still on the planning room floor?

    Balochistan is not a playground for “foreign elements”, as much as the PM would like to have us believe. Governance in the province has been hijacked by a reportedly brutal Frontier Corps that has claimed the area as its exclusive preserve. Innocent Baloch who may be able to contribute to the betterment of their society, political workers, educationists, doctors, engineers, etc, are being picked up and whisked away, reportedly by paramilitary forces and the government seems unable — and unwilling — to stop them. Resources located in Balochistan are hungrily swooped up by the centre without allocating a sufficient share for the Baloch people. They have no faith in the government and the army and hence separatist sentiment runs deep. Economic, industrial and resource development has not taken place, resulting in an increasingly poor population without access to rights and fair play. Is it the fault of the people or those who rule them for the mass frustration that is now taking a violent turn?

    Every dead body that ‘mysteriously’ turns up in Balochistan after ‘mysteriously’ going missing — the last count was 13,000 dead — is another nail in the coffin of any peace and stability in the province. It will not be long before we will be burying the soul of the largest province in this country. Short-sighted hated policies, cruel treatment, what comes close to an illegal occupying force in uniform and the consequent hate-fuelled sentiments of the Baloch people have turned one more part of Pakistan against the centre. Enough with the rhetoric and the cosmetic promises; Balochistan needs a determined political solution, otherwise we can, literally, kiss it goodbye.

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Mar 2011 6:52 #
  8. Anwer Kamal
    Member

    He is from Faisalabad.

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Mar 2011 7:20 #
  9. "He is from Faisalabad"
    Sure. He was born in Faisalabad, but he became judge from the quota of Balochistan by having a fake domicile from Balochistan and then represented himself as the native of Balochistan, violating the merit. In his LONG career there (see below), he subjugated the rights of people of Balochistan. To expect him to do any thing different now is fantasy.

    Interestingly, the Supremem Court site STILL peddles this lie:
    "Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry was born on 12 December 1948 (1948-12-12) (age 62) in Quetta, Balochistan"

    ...In 1989 he was appointed as Advocate General, Balochistan. He was elevated as Additional Judge, Balochistan High Court on 6 November 1990 until 21 April 1999. On April 22, 1999 he became Chief Justice of Balochistan High Court. Besides remaining as Judge of High Court, he discharged duties as Banking Judge, Judge Special Court for Speedy Trials, Judge Customs Appellate Courts as well as Company Judge. Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry also remained President of High Court Bar Association, Quetta, and was elected twice as Member of the Bar Council. In 1992 he was appointed as Chairman of Balochistan Local Council Election Authority and thereafter for second term in 1998. He also worked as Chairman, Provincial Review Board for the province of Balochistan and was twice appointed as Chairman of the Pakistan Red Crescent Society, Balochistan

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Mar 2011 7:34 #
  10. toamin
    member

    لیکن ہمارا مقامی میڈیا کیوں خاموش ہے؟ اس سے پتہ چلتا ہے کہ میڈیا کی آزادی بھی ایک ڈھونگ ہے

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Mar 2011 8:34 #
  11. لیکن ہمارا مقامی میڈیا کیوں خاموش ہے؟

    Our media has NOT been silent as mentioned above and in the previous thread. In fact even guys like Talat Hussain, Irfan Siddiqi have been very active in spreading establishment lies....

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Mar 2011 8:38 #
  12. toamin
    member

    Yes, because they consider that activity to be "patriotic"...

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Mar 2011 8:56 #
  13. Anwer Kamal
    Member

    muqami media.
    Actually no one understand the ruling group.
    It is not Zardari nor Showbaz.
    Media is not like past.
    It is a billionaire business.
    It is just game of money and businessman is always weak.

    Posted 1 year ago on 30 Mar 2011 20:36 #
  14. bsobaid
    Member

    Very sad nota.

    Baloch land is half pakistan. Iam worried if international pressure rise for some reason and free and fair elections are held in baloch land, we will see something really terrible.

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 0:50 #
  15. zenith
    Member

    @ obaid

    Terrible!

    So you still are not convinced that it is terrible enough?

    Many young baloch hate Pakistan more than Israel.

    And the Pakistani army response to that has been as follows

    http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=424821&version=1&template_id=41&parent_id=23

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 2:02 #
  16. @bsobaid
    "Iam worried if international pressure rise for some reason and free and fair elections are held in baloch land, we will see something really terrible."

    Sorry but that is one silly comment -- and on more than one level. So you are suggesting we should continue with the terrible policies unless "international pressure" stops us. You are saying "free and fair elections" should never be "held in baloch land". You are saying "free and fair elections are somrthing "really terrible". You are saying giving Baloch their rights is "something really terrible".

    Wow! And then you wonder why Baloch have started to hate Pakistan and want to separate!

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 8:07 #
  17. Hussain Farooqui
    Member

    No sensible policy was adopted in East Pakistan. The result was the fall of Dhaka in 1971 after a shameful surrender.

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 10:05 #
  18. bsobaid
    Member

    @nota and @zenith,

    You both completely misread my comments. I was pointing to the fact that Baloch awam are unfortunately dead against state policies to the extent of choosing something terrible and by terrible I meant East Pakistan.

    So the goal is to stop establishment's occupation of Baloch land and let political forces handle the situation.

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 14:42 #
  19. @bsobaid
    Now that's better way of putting it :)

    But is it going to happen? Not a chance. See the attitude of the army and FC represented accurately in the article at top:

    Patterns emerge. The victims were generally men between 20 and 40 years old – nationalist politicians, students, shopkeepers, labourers. In many cases they were abducted in broad daylight – dragged off buses, marched out of shops, detained at FC checkposts – by a combination of uniformed soldiers and plain-clothes intelligence men. Others just vanished. They re-emerge, dead, with an eerie tempo – approximately 15 bodies every month, although the average was disturbed last Saturday when eight bodies were found in three locations across Balochistan.
    ...
    Despairing relatives feel cornered. Abdul Rahim, a farmer wearing a jewelled skullcap, is from Khuzdar, a hotbed of insurgent violence. He produces court papers detailing the abduction of his son Saadullah in 2009. First he went to the courts but then his lawyer was shot dead. Then he went to the media but the local press club president was killed. Now, Rahim says, "nobody will help in case they are targeted too. We are hopeless."
    ...
    The FC commander, Maj Gen Niazi, wearing a sharp, dark suit and with neatly combed hair (he has just come from a conference) says he has little time for the rebel demand. "The Baloch are being manipulated by their leaders," he says...
    ...
    Worse again, he adds, they were supported by India. The Punjabi general offers no proof for his claim, but US and British intelligence broadly agree, according to the recent WikiLeaks cables. India sees Balochistan as payback for Pakistani meddling in Kashmir – which explains why Pakistani generals despise the nationalists so much. "Paid killers," says Niazi. He vehemently denies involvement in human rights violations. "To us, each and every citizen of Balochistan is equally dear," he says.

    Civilian officials in the province, however, have another story. Last November, the provincial chief minister, Aslam Raisani, told the BBC that the security forces were "definitely" guilty of some killings; earlier this month, the province's top lawyer, Salahuddin Mengal, told the supreme court the FC was "lifting people at will". He resigned a week later.

    But of course, the excuses are always the same:

    The army denies the charges, saying its good name is being blemished by impersonators. "Militants are using FC uniforms to kidnap people and malign our good name," says Major General Obaid Ullah Khan Niazi, commander of the 46,000 FC troops stationed in Balochistan. "Our job is to enforce the law, not to break it."
    ...

    And this is after the "Balochistan Package" and after Musharraf, with "democracy" ruling the land:

    The bodies surface quietly, like corks bobbing up in the dark. They come in twos and threes, a few times a week, dumped on desolate mountains or empty city roads, bearing the scars of great cruelty. Arms and legs are snapped; faces are bruised and swollen. Flesh is sliced with knives or punctured with drills; genitals are singed with electric prods. In some cases the bodies are unrecognisable, sprinkled with lime or chewed by wild animals. All have a gunshot wound in the head.

    This gruesome parade of corpses has been surfacing in Balochistan, Pakistan's largest province, since last July. Several human rights groups, including Amnesty International, have accounted for more than 100 bodies – lawyers, students, taxi drivers, farm workers. Most have been tortured. The last three were discovered on Sunday.
    ...
    The forces of law and order also seem to be curiously indifferent to the plight of the dead men. Not a single person has been arrested or prosecuted; in fact, police investigators openly admit they are not even looking for anyone. ...the prime suspect is not some shady gang of sadistic serial killers, but the country's powerful military and its unaccountable intelligence men.
    ...
    And in recent months it has grown dramatically worse.
    ...
    One man produces a mobile phone picture of the body of his 22-year-old cousin, Mumtaz Ali Kurd, his eyes black with swelling and his shirt drenched in blood. A relative of Zaman Khan, one of three lawyers killed in the past nine months, produces court papers. A third trembles as he describes finding his brother's body in an orchard near Quetta.
    ...
    Lawyer Kachkol Ali witnessed security forces drag three men from his office in April 2009. Their bodies turned up five days later, dead and decomposed. After telling his story to the press, Ali was harassed by military intelligence, who warned him his life was in danger. He fled the country. "In Pakistan, there is only rule of the jungle," he says by phone from Lørenskog, a small Norwegian town where he won asylum last summer. "Our security agencies pick people up and treat them like war criminals," he says. "They don't even respect the dead."

    How's this for Agaz-e-hakooq-e-Balochistan, Eh?

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 15:06 #
  20. shirazi
    Member

    @nota

    "Kvttay ka bacha Chaudhry Iftikhar"

    If I had said that I would have been warned and banned by now :)

    I don't know when we say establishment's puppet why Ch. Sb. is not included in the list?

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 15:12 #
  21. bsobaid
    Member

    @nota, very sad article.

    Aghaz-e-huqooq was a positive initiative although as I mentioned somewhere before establishment made it clear on democratic government as Baloch Land being off limits.

    About Ch. Iftikhar, I dont necessarily think he is establishment's puppet but he is afraid of them. Being a puppet and being under pressure and intimidation by establishment are two different things. Although I'd think Ch. Iftikhar has more fan base in establishment compared to PPP.

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 15:20 #
  22. @bsobaid
    "Being a puppet and being under pressure and intimidation by establishment are two different things."
    But I don't see any difference as far as 'results' are concerned ;-)

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 15:25 #
  23. bsobaid
    Member

    This is true but there is a hope they are making some effort to break free from establishment as opposed to be always willing of going down on knees like Parwanay, Altapbhai and Showbaz.

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 15:32 #
  24. shirazi
    Member

    @bsobaid

    Every time gov tried to curtail GHQ's activities judiciary and media put pressure on gov. It's not being intimidated by GHQ it's working for GHQ :)

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 15:43 #
  25. bsobaid
    Member

    Media, yes. Judiciary probably not as much.

    The height of establishment ghulami exposure was the KL bill and when government released a notification to control ISI by having spy master report to Ministry of Defence and selected by democratic PM. Not to mention, government had to take the notification back within one day with all bona fide ghulams abbasis, siddiquis and mirs jumping up and down.

    This is why I keep saying Ch. Iftikhar is best suited for National assemblies rather than being an illegitimate Cheif Justice.

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 15:50 #
  26. I wouldn't go that far calling working for GHQ, but say assisting each other for a common cause.

    GHQ is part of the check and balance process since the institutions are still weak. Imagine if the current govt is not afraid of the GHQ, we wouldn't call it govt then but simply reign of PPP. So I think judiciary likes another set of eyes (GHQ) focused on the govt and vice versa.

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 15:57 #
  27. bsobaid
    Member

    check and balance..utter non sense.

    Elections are check and balance, what does GHQ have anything to do with it. They should do their job and stop loosing wars from India and terrorists.

    This nonsense concept have been induced in our collective intelligence by establishment in past 60 years.

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 15:59 #
  28. Dusky
    Member

    CJ with all his power not taking any action is part of problem not part of solution.
    He did the same thing in missing person case, Lal Masjid and few other cases, used these issues to restore his job and then no action since he get his position back. In my opinion he is a coward person who bark only against government on the will of establishment.

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 16:11 #
  29. bsobaid
    Member

    or Dusky, he only barks when his own job is in danger.

    Posted 1 year ago on 31 Mar 2011 16:21 #
  30. hypocrite
    Member

    What makes the man in 21st century so barbaric that he is not willing to live in peace with others, share the bounties, allow freedom, accept responsibilities and rights.

    Is it just greed?

    Posted 1 year ago on 01 Apr 2011 2:48 #
  31. hypocrite
    Member

    What a beautiful and full of resource, province Balochistan is. Any country will be proud to have Balochistan and for that matter any province of Pakistan, yet it is I who cannot tolerate my fellow Pakistanis.

    As time has passed since our independence, we rather than maturing into a nation, have disintegrated into groups. There must be a reason. There must be a background.

    For s dumb person like me it is difficult to comprehend the reason, but is it so difficult for other Pakistanis to figure out what we are doing wrong.

    I am a coward without any self respect, but what is preventing other Pakistanis to rise up againt the injustice done to other Pakistanis regardless if they are sindhi, baloch, pashtun, punjabi or mohajir etc.

    What is stopping a suuffering Pakistani to join hand with another suffering Pakistani to support each other. Are we so callous?

    When it comes to a game of cricket everyone becomes one but when it comes to supporting another fellow human being, another Pakistani, our religion, our faith and our unity disappears.

    Posted 1 year ago on 01 Apr 2011 2:57 #
  32. liv_2_die
    Member

    could any1 enlighten me what establishment (FC) gets by ruling balochistan ??? wots the motive behind these atrocities (as put forward by many of you here) ???

    Posted 1 year ago on 01 Apr 2011 3:51 #
  33. @liv_2_die
    "could any1 enlighten me what establishment (FC) gets by ruling balochistan ??? wots the motive behind these atrocities (as put forward by many of you here) ??? "

    Right after you 'enlighten' me what establishment got by 'ruling' East Pakistan ??? wots the motive behind these atrocities???

    And while you are at it, tell me what motive do qabzi groups have? What motive do imperialists have? What do their forces get out of it? What do indonesian soldiers get out of genociding East Timurese, etc., etc., etc.....

    Posted 1 year ago on 01 Apr 2011 5:11 #
  34. liv_2_die
    Member

    asking a question in the answer of a question doesnt do any good .. solution to any problem lies in neutralizing the motives ... hence if we want a solution for baluchistan, we must neutralize the motvies of the problem makers .. dont be a wise @ss in doubting the sincerity of the question .. all these examples still dont answer the original question .. wots in it for them ???

    Posted 1 year ago on 01 Apr 2011 6:14 #
  35. @lie_2_die
    " .. dont be a wise @ss in doubting the sincerity of the question .. "
    I was merely suggesting you were pretending to be a cluless @ss (but saying it in a nice way). Appears I was wrong about the 'pretending' bit.

    "wots in it for them ???"
    Butter Cookies!

    1 cup butter
    3/4 cup sugar
    1 egg
    1-1/2 teaspoon vanilla
    2-1/2 cups flour

    Directions:
    Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

    Cream the butter and sugar. Add egg and vanilla, blending well. Blend in flour. Chill dough for 45 minutes. Roll dough 1/4 inch thick and use cookie cutters to make cookies. Bake on ungreased cookie sheet for 5 minutes. Cool cookie sheet between batches.

    :-P

    Posted 1 year ago on 01 Apr 2011 8:01 #
  36. gv
    Member

    Liv2 die

    which cave have you been living in for the past 40 years?

    Posted 1 year ago on 01 Apr 2011 10:02 #
  37. Anwer Kamal
    Member

    Another sad news.
    Today a blast on Railway line at Dera Allah Yar.
    There was firing also on Quetta Express going to Lahore.
    5 compartments of the train went of the track.
    Many of this sort are happening daily.
    End of injustice ,End of corruption is requirement of the day.
    Otherwise Sky will fall.

    Posted 1 year ago on 02 Apr 2011 0:05 #
  38. Our media's silence on this issue is the biggest sign of their hypocrisy!!

    I can't believe our so called "free media" is so silent on this issue!!

    Posted 1 year ago on 02 Apr 2011 3:03 #
  39. aftab arif
    Member


    Posted 1 year ago on 03 Apr 2011 14:30 #
  40. I found this pair of headlines gracing the front page of today's Jang together funny:
    Image and video hosting by TinyPic

    Posted 1 year ago on 03 Apr 2011 14:44 #
  41. scandinavian
    Member

    Ehhhh. Two big issues with PRIME priority? Only piplyas (and non-league) can do that.

    Posted 1 year ago on 03 Apr 2011 14:46 #
  42. @Scandinavian
    And you can be sure that means NEITHER has any priority ;-)

    Posted 1 year ago on 03 Apr 2011 15:04 #
  43. Anwer Kamal
    Member

    You did not provide from Jang today.
    http://ejang.jang.com.pk//4-3-2011/lahore/images/228.gif
    Please some one paste the news and translate it for those who can not read Urdu.

    Posted 1 year ago on 03 Apr 2011 21:39 #
  44. liv_2_die
    Member

    beghair chawalian marey aur sarcasm kiye, can any1 tell me the motive here ???

    Posted 1 year ago on 03 Apr 2011 21:58 #
  45. Anwer Kamal
    Member

    Motive
    To worry about our country
    Before any next 16th December.

    Posted 1 year ago on 03 Apr 2011 22:06 #
  46. liv_2_die
    Member

    not this motive, scroll up and read the previous posts .. u will know what i am asking

    Posted 1 year ago on 03 Apr 2011 22:07 #
  47. This is sad and disgusting!

    Posted 1 year ago on 03 Apr 2011 23:14 #
  48. @dell
    "This is sad and disgusting!"
    That my friend is a daily occurrance...
    Latest:
    Disappeared Baloch Journalist Killed, Dumped in Quetta

    QUETTA: The bullet-riddled dead body of a Baloch journalist was recovered from Quetta on Friday, police said. Family members said Rehmatullah Shaeen, a correspondent of anti-government Daily Tawar newspaper in Bolan...

    Five more disappeared persons are extrajudicially killed in Balochistan


    The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has received information that the bodies of five disappeared persons have been found in different areas of Balochistan. The bodies bore bullet wounds and marks of torture. Five victims were abducted from Balochistan province and Karachi, Sindh province at different times but their bodies were found in different areas of Balochistan province. Witnesses stated that they were abducted by persons both in uniform and in plain clothes that identified themselves as state intelligence persons.

    Disappearances in Balochistan have become the routine work of the intelligence agencies and Frontier Corps (FC). Since last year the law enforcement authorities have introduced a new trend in which they kill the disappeared person extra judicially so as to destroy any possible evidence of their wrong doing.

    On 20 March 2011 Mr. Hameed Shaheen date of birth (31), son of Haji Ghous Bakhsh, holding CNIC (Computerised National Identity Card) No. 54400-4155145-9, was on the way to Karachi for his medical check-up by bus. Security personnel in both uniform and plain clothes stopped the bus near Sona Khan Police Station Quetta. Mr.Hameed Shaheen was abducted. He was a resident of Muslimabad of Sariab Quetta. On 22 March his bullet riddled body was found at Sardar Karez area of Quetta in Balochistan province. He was the former chairman of the Baloch Student Organization (BSO).

    Two more bullet riddled bodies, including that of a leader of the Baloch Students Organization (BSO Azad), were found from different parts of Balochistan.

    On February 2011 Fareed Baloch abducted allegedly by personnel of state agencies. He was student of Balochistan University of Engineering and Technology Khuzdar and Zonal president of the Baloch Students Organization (BSO Azad). On 27 March his bullet riddled body was found at Ferozabad nullah of Khuzdar District some 360 km away from Quetta of Balochistan province. There were also marks of torture on his body.

    Mr. Saleh Muhammad, son of Nuroz Khan was abducted from a passenger van by plan cloth persons in Bariat area of Awaran, on 27 March his bullet riddled body was found in a mountainous area of Awaran district of Balochistan.

    Another two more bullet riddled bodies of illegally detained Baloch youth were found in Winder area near Hub industrial town of Balochistan province. The victims were identified as Arif Noor Baloch and Muhammad Nawaz Marri, both were abducted by intelligence agencies.

    On 31 October 2010 Arif Noor, son of Noor Muhammad Baloch was abducted in presence of his mother, sister and other family members by Karachi police and intelligence agencies from his residence in Karachi of Sindh province, he was an employed as a 16 grade officer in Gwadar Development Authority (GDA). He suffered an accident and after that he came to his home in Jaffer Aziz apartment Garden East Karachi where his parents and other family members are living. After two months bed rest he was kidnapped. On 23 March his bullet riddled body was from Windar area near Hub industrial town of Balochistana province. The second body was of Muhammad Nawaz Marri found just inches away from Arif Noor Bloch’s body. His body was bore marks of extreme torture and mistreatment and there were bullet wounds to his head. On 5 January he was abducted from near Lasbella while he was returning to his home from work.

    ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

    The Extrajudicial killing of disappeared persons in Pakistan has become routine since it started in 2010. Since the beginning of 2010 to date more than 115 persons have been were killed extra judicially. Many people have died at the hands of the security forces in extrajudicial executions and deaths in custody, and thousands of people are reported to have been subjected to enforced disappearance....

    Posted 1 year ago on 04 Apr 2011 3:57 #
  49. liv_2_die
    Member

    i still have the same question ... whyyyyyyyyyyyyy ???

    Posted 1 year ago on 04 Apr 2011 4:07 #
  50. Hussain Farooqui
    Member

    Different foreign powers have their vested interests in Baluchistan, so they are taking part in the present situation. However, our govt. has failed to move towards any sensible solution.

    Posted 1 year ago on 04 Apr 2011 6:36 #

RSS feed for this topic

Reply »

You must log in to post.