City
Epaper

Families forced to disown 'militant' kin in Balochistan, rights body calls it state persecution

By IANS | Updated: September 21, 2025 14:05 IST

Quetta, Sep 21 A human rights body has strongly condemned the recent directive from the Balochistan government that ...

Open in App

Quetta, Sep 21 A human rights body has strongly condemned the recent directive from the Balochistan government that compelled families to submit sworn affidavits disowning relatives accused of "militancy", under threat of "criminal prosecution, confiscation of property, and withdrawal of state benefits".

"This order constitutes collective punishment in direct contravention of international human rights and humanitarian law.

According to the HRCB, the directive is particularly abhorrent in how it treats the families of victims of enforced disappearance.

The rights body asserted that forcing families to report to Pakistan's Army and Frontier Corps -- the very institutions credibly accused of carrying out enforced disappearances across Balochistan constitutes an act of "deliberate humiliation, coercion, and psychological torture".

Such measures, the HRCB said, further entrench impunity for grave violations while shifting the burden of responsibility from the Pakistani authorities to the victims themselves.

The rights body urged the international community, the United Nations human rights mechanisms, and legal experts to unequivocally denounce this "draconian and unlawful policy."

"It is imperative that this measure be recognised for what it is: a blatant violation of Pakistan's obligations under international law, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention Against Torture (CAT)," the HRCB stated.

The rights body also emphasised that rather than persecuting families and institutionalising collective punishment, the Pakistani Government must be held accountable for "ending enforced disappearances, ensuring due process, and upholding the rule of law in Balochistan".

"Anything less perpetuates a cycle of repression that may amount to state-sanctioned persecution of an entire population," the HRCB added.

People from Balochistan are currently fighting for their independence from Pakistan.

Various human rights organisations of Balochistan have time and again highlighted the repression by Pakistani forces in the province, which includes violent raids on the homes of Baloch leaders and civilians, unlawful arrests, enforced disappearances, the 'kill and dump' policy, detention under the Maintenance of Public Order Ordinance, and the filing of fabricated police cases.

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

Other SportsSr Men Inter-Departmental Nationals: Punjab & Sind, Services, Food Corp, and SAI win on Day 3

EntertainmentNita Ambani celebrates Navratri, performs dandiya with Falguni Pathak

InternationalTwo more people die due to dengue in Bangladesh, death toll in 2025 crosses 200

HealthTwo more people die due to dengue in Bangladesh, death toll in 2025 crosses 200

BusinessFarmers welcome MSP hike for Rabi crops, say PM Modi’s decision will boost income and living standards

International Realted Stories

InternationalPakistan: Heavy rain alert issued in Punjab province as nationwide death toll reaches 1006

InternationalAfghanistan's FM Amir Khan Muttaqi to visit Delhi next week

InternationalBritish Kashmiris confront Pakistani Consul General in Birmingham over civilian killings in PoJK

InternationalResumption of direct flights between India and China by late October, announces MEA

InternationalUK Home Secy "horrified" by Manchester synagogue attack, urges to follow advice of emergency services