City
Epaper

Amid state intimidation, Baloch families continue sit-in protest demanding justice

By ANI | Updated: August 3, 2025 03:34 IST

Islamabad [Pakistan], August 3 : Families of detained and forcibly disappeared Baloch leaders continued with their sit-in protest in ...

Open in App

Islamabad [Pakistan], August 3 : Families of detained and forcibly disappeared Baloch leaders continued with their sit-in protest in Islamabad despite facing harsh weather conditions and state intimidation, leading the Baloch human rights group, Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC), reported on Saturday.

As per BYC, the families had travelled from Balochistan all the way to Islamabad in search for justice.

The protesters include elderly women and children who have withstood heavy rains, extreme heat, and severe weather over the past several days.

Despite this, BYC said that the state has responded with roadblocks, surveillance, intimidation, along with the sealing of roads in front of the National Press Club.

"Today marks Day 18 since the Baloch families of detained BYC leaders and other enforcedly disappeared persons travelled from Balochistan to Islamabad in search of justice," BYC said in a post on the social media platform X.

BYC further added, "For 18 consecutive days, these families, many of them elderly women and children, have sat in protest through heavy rain, unbearable heat, and harsh weather, yet no camp has been allowed. Instead of listening to their cries, the state has responded with roadblocks, intimidation, surveillance, and the sealing of the road in front of the National Press Club."

{{{{twitter_post_id####}}}}

Balochistan has long been the centre of persistent human rights issues. The area has experienced cycles of violence related to separatist movements, a heavy military presence, forced disappearances, and economic neglect. These challenges have attracted attention from human rights groups, journalists, and international observers.

Human rights groups have long accused Pakistani authorities of abducting civilians in Balochistan without due process, using enforced disappearances to suppress dissent and intimidate communities in restive areas. Pakistani authorities routinely deny these allegations, but civil society continues to condemn the security forces' role in systematic abductions targeting students, political workers, and residents.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App โ†’

Related Stories

NationalGujarat sanctions Rs 4,179 crore for smart urban transformation in 2025

Other SportsKapil Dev, Baichung Bhutia, Abhinav Bindra, Pullela Gopichand, Gagan Narang join forces to shape India's Olympic future

Other Sports5th Test: Rain brings early end to riveting day four, sets stage for thrilling day five

NationalTripuraโ€™s international cricket stadium to be ready by December: CM Manik Saha

HealthAre Samosa and Jalebi Really the True Health Villains? India May Have 449 Million Overweight People by 2050

International Realted Stories

InternationalUAE: Abu Dhabi's non-oil foreign trade grew 34.7 pc in H1 2025

InternationalIsrael: Three alleged members of reputed Arab Criminal Assassination Gang arrested

InternationalUAE delivers 65 tonnes of medical supplies to Gaza in cooperation with WHO

InternationalChile: Four dead, one still missing after El Teniente mine collapse

InternationalTaiwan's MND plans mass production of Tien Kung IV missiles, new armoured vehicles