City
Epaper

BSO-Azad honours activists allegedly killed in Pak custody; slams "pattern of repression" in Balochistan

By ANI | Updated: May 4, 2026 09:10 IST

Balochistan [Pakistan], May 4 : The Baloch Students Organization-Azad (BSO-Azad) released a statement commemorating four Baloch political workers, Ejaz ...

Open in App

Balochistan [Pakistan], May 4 : The Baloch Students Organization-Azad (BSO-Azad) released a statement commemorating four Baloch political workers, Ejaz Baloch, Shahnawaz Baloch, Aftab Baloch, and Basit Baloch, who were killed after their alleged detention by Pakistani security forces in Awaran district in 2015, according to a report by The Balochistan Post (TBP).

In its statement, BSO-Azad described the four men as "dedicated political activists" who were involved in organising and educating Baloch youth while advocating for political change in the region.

The organisation said the men remained active despite what it described as a period marked by enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings in Balochistan.

According to the group, the incident took place on April 21, 2015, when security forces allegedly raided the village of Gwarjik in Mashkay during a wedding ceremony.

BSO-Azad claimed that several homes were burned and the four men were taken into custody. Their bodies were reportedly discovered a day later in the same area, as cited by the TBP report.

The statement further noted that the deceased had also been involved in humanitarian activities, including relief operations after the 2013 earthquake in Awaran.

BSO-Azad described the killings as part of a broader pattern of repression in Balochistan and reaffirmed its position on the political future of the region.

The organisation paid tribute to the four men, describing their deaths as a loss to what it termed a larger political struggle.

Pakistani authorities have not publicly responded to the specific allegations surrounding the incident.

Enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings in Balochistan continue to remain a major human rights concern.

Families often spend years searching for missing loved ones, while activists accuse security agencies of illegal detentions and staged encounters.

Despite continued protests and reports by human rights organisations, accountability remains limited.

These unresolved cases continue to fuel fear, resentment, and deep mistrust between the state and the Baloch population.

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

Related Stories

NationalUttar Pradesh: Fire destroys shacks in Ghaziabad's Vasundhara; no casualties

LifestyleAngaraki Chaturthi 2026 on May 5: Puja Muhurat, Vrat Rules and Significance Explained

NationalThis is just the beginning: Sunetra Pawar on Baramati early trends surge

NationalBengal polls 2026: Trends show four districts where no Trinamool candidate is leading

NationalMajority in sight for BJP in West Bengal, breaches Trinamool bastion

International Realted Stories

InternationalRussia interprets 2 Ukrainian drones, no casualties reported

InternationalJapan, Australia pivot to "resilient" supply chains to counter China, Middle East volatility

InternationalBipartisan US lawmakers push resolution on China threats to Taiwan ahead of Trump-Xi Summit

InternationalRubio to visit Italy and Vatican to ease friction after Trump's clashes with Pope and Meloni: Report

InternationalJaishankar interacts with Indians in Jamaica on transformation back home