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Amnesty International about Baloch killings in Pakistan

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The Pakistani government must investigate the torture and killings of more than 40 Baloch leaders and political activists over the past four months, Amnesty International said today.

Activists, politicians and student leaders are among those who have been targeted in enforced disappearances, abductions, arbitrary arrests and cases of torture and other ill-treatment.

The violence takes place against a backdrop of increasing political unrest and Pakistan army operations in Balochistan, south western Pakistan.

“The Pakistani government must act immediately to provide justice for the growing list of atrocities in Balochistan,” said Sam Zarifi, Amnesty International’s Asia-Pacific Director.

“Baloch political leaders and activists are clearly being targeted and the government must do much more to end this alarming trend.”

Among the latest victims of the ongoing violence are Faqir Mohammad Baloch and Zahoor Baloch, whose bodies were discovered in the district of Mastung on 21 October 2010. Faqir Mohammad Baloch, a poet and member of the Voice of Missing Baloch Missing Persons, was abducted on 23 September.

Zahoor Baloch, a member of the Baloch Student Organization-Azad was abducted on 23 August. According to media reports, both received a single bullet wound to the head at point blank range and showed signs of being tortured.

The discovery of the two men’s bodies is part of a growing trend of “kill and dump” operations. Bullet-ridden bodies of those who have been abducted, many showing signs of torture, are increasingly being found across Balochistan. Previously, the bodies of missing persons were rarely recovered.

Other recent victims of the violence include Mir Nooruddin Mengal, a member of the Balochistan National Party’s (BNP-M) Central Executive Committee was shot dead by unidentified men near his home in Gharebabad, near Kalat Bazar on 13 October.

Yasin Baloch, a member of Voice for Baloch Missing Persons and brother of Mujeeb Baloch, senior member of BSO-Azad, who had also been abducted, was shot by unidentified gunmen near Roshare Kalat on 10 October.

The victims’ relatives and activists often accuse the Pakistani security forces and intelligence agencies of carrying out these violations. A previously unknown organization, Sipah-e Shuhada-e Balochistan, has also claimed responsibility for some of the killings.

“The Pakistan government’s ongoing failure to prevent abuses has emboldened the perpetrators behind these atrocities,” said Sam Zarifi.

“The Pakistani government must show that it can and will investigate the Pakistani military and Frontier Corps, as well as intelligence agencies, who are widely accused of playing a role in these incidents.”

Amnesty International warned that the rise in enforced disappearances and kill and dump incidents has aggravated political tensions in Baluchistan and led to reprisal killings by Baloch armed groups.

On 14 August 2010, 17 people from Punjab province were killed in Quetta. The Balochistan Liberation Army claimed responsibility, saying that the killings were in response to the killings of Baloch missing persons.

Amnesty International urges all sides in the conflict to respect human rights and stop all torture, enforced disappearances, abductions, targeted killings and indiscriminate attacks.

In November 2009, the Pakistani government announced a package of proposed policy and legislation reforms for Balochistan, and promised to resolve the cases of enforced disappearances, but it has so far failed to do so.

Other prominent killings of Baloch activists since July include:
On 11 July, Maula Baksh Dashti, a key figure in the Balochistan National Party and a former district Nazim (Chief Official) of Kech (Turbat) District was shot dead by unidentified gunmen in his native district.
On 14 July, former Senator Habib Jalib Baloch, Secretary General of the Balochistan National Party-Mengal (BNP-M) was assassinated in the Parkaniabad area of Quetta, by three gunmen on a motorbike. He received seven bullets in the neck and chest and had been receiving threats.
On 20 July, a leading member of the BNP-M, Liaqat Mengal, was shot dead on by three gunmen on a motorbike near his house in the Kalat district of Balochistan.
On 26 July, the bullet riddled bodies of two cousins, student Ashfaq Ahmed Mullahzai and Muhmmad Farooq Mengal, were recovered in Quetta, in the Kili Qambrani area. Their relatives claim they had been abducted in May 2010.
On 6 September, the body of Baloch lawyer Zaman Marri was found in Mastung. He had received a single bullet to his forehead and his body showed torture marks. The lawyer was reportedly abducted by intelligence agents near his place of work in Quetta on 18 August.
On 23 September, the bullet riddled body of missing Baloch lawyer Ali Sher Kurd was found in Khuzdar district. Kurd was reportedly abducted by Pakistani intelligent agents three days before. His neck was broken and he showed marks of torture.
Balochistan has a history of insurgency with local groups advocating greater autonomy. Four waves of violent unrest took place in 1948, 1958-59, 1962-63 and 1973-77.

Local people in Balochistan are demanding a bigger share of the revenue generated by the province's natural resources, principally natural gas, which they believe now disproportionately benefit other provinces.

Some Baloch groups have resorted to violence, while others are campaigning peacefully. The Pakistani national government has attempted to suppress this opposition by increasing the military presence in the region.

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. The confrontation between Baloch nationalists and the state is characterised by human rights abuses committed by all sides.
Pakistan urged to investigate murder and torture of Baloch activists | Amnesty International
 
Screw Amnesty International.This is our internal matter.Amnesty International can go to hell.
 
Amnesty seeks probe into killing of Baloch political activists

Amnesty International on Tuesday demanded an investigation into the torture and killings of 40 Baloch leaders and political activists over the past four months; stating that the Pakistan Government’s failure to prevent abuses has emboldened the perpetrators of these atrocities.

In a statement, Amnesty International’s Asia-Pacific Director Sam Zarifi said: "The Pakistani government must show that it can and will investigate the Pakistani military and Frontier Corps, as well as intelligence agencies, who are widely accused of playing a role in these incidents.”

According to Amnesty International, activists, politicians and student leaders are among those who have been targeted in enforced disappearances, abductions, arbitrary arrests and cases of torture and other ill-treatment in the restive province. "Baloch political leaders and activists are clearly being targeted and the government must do much more to end this alarming trend.’’

Among the latest victims of the ongoing violence are Faqir Mohammad Baloch and Zahoor Baloch whose bodies were discovered in Mastung district on October 21. Faqir Mohammad was a poet and member of the Voice for Baloch Missing Persons and Zahoor was associated with the Baloch Student Organisation-Azad.

The discovery of the two men’s bodies, Amnesty International noted, is part of a growing trend of “kill and dump” operations. "Bullet-ridden bodies of those who have been abducted, many showing signs of torture, are increasingly being found across Balochistan. Previously, the bodies of missing persons were rarely recovered.’’

The statement also argues that the rise in enforced disappearances and kill and dump incidents has aggravated political tensions in Balochistan and led to reprisal killings by Baloch armed groups like the killing of 17 people from Punjab in Quetta on August 14.

Pointing out that the Balochistan Liberation Army claimed responsibility for the killings – maintaining that they were in response to the killings of Baloch missing persons – Amnesty International has also urged all sides in the conflict to respect human rights and stop all torture, enforced disappearances, abductions, targeted killings and indiscriminate attacks.

The Hindu : News / International : Amnesty seeks probe into killing of Baloch political activists
 
'Pak govt must provide immediate justice for Baloch atrocities': Amnesty International

The Pakistan government must investigate the torture and killings of more than 40 Baloch leaders and political activists over the past four months, human rights group Amnesty International has said.

"The Pakistani government must act immediately to provide justice for the growing list of atrocities in Balochistan," said Sam Zarifi, Amnesty International's Asia-Pacific Director.

"Baloch political leaders and activists are clearly being targeted and the government must do much more to end this alarming trend," he added.

According to AI, activists, politicians and student leaders are among those who have been "targeted in enforced disappearances, abductions, arbitrary arrests and cases of torture and other ill-treatment" against a backdrop of "increasing political unrest and Pakistan army operations in Balochistan", which is a south western province of the country.

Among the latest victims of the ongoing violence are Faqir Mohammad Baloch- a member of the Voice of Missing Baloch Missing Persons, and Zahoor Baloch- a member of the Baloch Student Organization-Azad , whose bodies were discovered in the district of Mastung on 21 October 2010.

The discovery of the two men's bullet-ridden bodies, showing signs of torture, is part of a growing trend of "kill and dump" operations, the group said.

The victims' relatives and activists often accuse the Pakistani security forces and intelligence agencies of carrying out these violations, it added. A previously unknown organization, Sipah-e Shuhada-e Balochistan, has also claimed responsibility for some of the killings.

"The Pakistan government's ongoing failure to prevent abuses has emboldened the perpetrators behind these atrocities," said Zarifi.

"The Pakistani government must show that it can and will investigate the Pakistani military and Frontier Corps, as well as intelligence agencies, who are widely accused of playing a role in these incidents," he added.

The HR group has warned that the "rise in enforced disappearances and kill and dump incidents has aggravated political tensions in Baluchistan and led to reprisal killings by Baloch armed groups." (ANI)

'Pak govt must provide immediate justice for Baloch atrocities': Amnesty International
 
Screw Amnesty International.This is our internal matter.Amnesty International can go to hell.

Then we have no right to accuse India of anything..
after all.. Kashmir is under their control.. and its an internal matter.:coffee:

The population of the other three provinces must pressurize their elites and themselves go on a Baloch rights campaign.. lest another 71 happens.
 
Then we have no right to accuse India of anything..
after all.. Kashmir is under their control.. and its an internal matter.:coffee:

The population of the other three provinces must pressurize their elites and themselves go on a Baloch rights campaign.. lest another 71 happens.
Well is Baluchistan disputed on any map or in UN like IOK?Is there any territorial dispute regarding Baluchistan with any country?It's okay to be leftist heck even i am tilted towards center-left but just because you are leftist does not mean you have to act like Najam Sethi.
 
^^ Oh, cool. So the absence of the 'Disputed territory' tag means that one can do what the hell one wants, eh? Good to know. Please do not make any noise about any human rights violations anywhere in the world if the area is not disputed.
 
Well is Baluchistan disputed on any map or in UN like IOK?Is there any territorial dispute regarding Baluchistan with any country?It's okay to be leftist heck even i am tilted towards center-left but just because you are leftist does not mean you have to act like Najam Sethi.

where are human rights?
i think u ppl love to take care of human rights.
hypocrisy.:blah::blah::blah:
 
Well is Baluchistan disputed on any map or in UN like IOK?Is there any territorial dispute regarding Baluchistan with any country?It's okay to be leftist heck even i am tilted towards center-left but just because you are leftist does not mean you have to act like Najam Sethi.

Never had the time to hear of Najam Sethi.
However, Bangladesh was not a disputed territory either..
WE all know the result of that.
The problem isn't as exacerbated as proclaimed by certain hostile sources but there is a problem and it is not restricted to Sardar's and Nawabs. Even the people of Makran coast have begun talking of rights abuse and separation of Baluchistan from Pakistan.
A dangerous trend that has emerged during the last ten years or so.
And I dont need Najam sethi's columns to tell me that... this I know first hand by conversations with Makrani community members.
 
Well the supreme court and other authorities will take due action but international organizations a big ******* NO!
 
Remember these words and never again shout about human rights...never...never ever!!! :angry:

Why not. The so called killings haven't been proved. It isn't proved that whether they were killed by Pakistani forces or terrorists themselves for some differences. On the other hand terrorists have killed dozens of non balochis and many Balochis too, hopefully Amnesty International would issue a report about those human rights violations too. It goes both ways. You want violence you will get it. This is the message to BLA and other terrorists.


:)
 
Well is Baluchistan disputed on any map or in UN like IOK?Is there any territorial dispute regarding Baluchistan with any country?It's okay to be leftist heck even i am tilted towards center-left but just because you are leftist does not mean you have to act like Najam Sethi.

Remember this the next time you rant about Narendra Modi, RSS etc.
 
Why not. The so called killings haven't been proved. It isn't proved that whether they were killed by Pakistani forces or terrorists themselves for some differences. On the other hand terrorists have killed dozens of non balochis and many Balochis too, hopefully Amnesty International would issue a report about those human rights violations too. It goes both ways. You want violence you will get it. This is the message to BLA and other terrorists.


:)

Same logic can be applied to so-called mass graves/human rights violations in Indian kashmir.
 
Why not. The so called killings haven't been proved. It isn't proved that whether they were killed by Pakistani forces or terrorists themselves for some differences. On the other hand terrorists have killed dozens of non balochis and many Balochis too, hopefully Amnesty International would issue a report about those human rights violations too. It goes both ways. You want violence you will get it. This is the message to BLA and other terrorists.


:)

and this is the same msg to the terrorist who are fueling violence in india:confused:
 
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