July 12, 2022
3 mins read

Pakistan may repeat Bangladesh mistake in Balochistan

Many in the civil society believe that the army’s policy of isolating and suppressing its own people from Balochistan could create a situation similar to the late ’60s…reports Asian Lite News

The repressive campaigns by the Pakistan Army against Baloch students could prove to be Pakistan’s ‘Bangladesh’ mistake.

The Pakistan Army’s hit teams are on a ruthless campaign to target young Baloch students, studying in various parts of the country, to brutally suppress the growing wave of protest among the young and restless in the Baloch community, reported Al Arabiya Post.

Many in the civil society believe that the army’s policy of isolating and suppressing its own people from Balochistan could create a situation similar to the late ’60s when Pakistan carried out a brutal wave of suppression against Bengali Muslims on the issue of language and ended up losing East Pakistan.

In the past few months, over 48 Baloch students were jumped upon by anonymous armed men, at home and outside their colleges, assaulted, their phones snatched away and bundled into big, unnumbered vehicles.

All of them were mercilessly beaten up in secret cells, hung upside down and kept hungry for days, reported Al Arabiya Post.

According to various estimates, over 5,000 Baloch men and women have ‘disappeared’ in the last few years. Of these, there has been an alarming rise in the number of young university students in the recent past.

Such has been the army’s ruthless campaign against Baloch students that the Pakistan Human Rights Commission in June this year strongly condemned “the recent cycle of abductions and manhandling of Baloch students.”

Referring to the abduction of students from Karachi University, the commission pointed out that these students were “allegedly being picked up by law enforcement personnel, and those who demand their release are roughed up and arrested.”

In fact, after a suicide bombing outside Karachi University which killed three Chinese nationals in April this year, there had been sudden spurt in crackdown on Baloch students across the country, reported Al Arabiya Post.

Several students, living in hostels and other residences across Karachi, were picked up in several swoops, tortured and detained in secret cells. Only a few have since returned.

The sudden rise in the disappearance of Baloch students and others is caused by Chinese anxieties about the mega-million projects under the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), reported Al Arabiya Post.

The Chinese have demanded an immediate end to attacks on their citizens and the projects that run through Balochistan. The local Baloch are up in arms against the CPEC projects which threaten to snatch their livelihood and change the demographics of their homeland.

With the Pakistan Army assuring the Chinese about security in Balochistan, the assaults on young and older Baloch men and women are likely to see an unprecedented rise in the coming days, reported Al Arabiya Post.

Another reason for the Army’s cycle of suppression of Baloch people is to stem a new leadership of the people emerging from the ranks of university students.

The Pakhtun student leaders had put tremendous pressure on the army in recent years on similar issues of disappearances and assaults.

The Pakhtun people nurse strong opposition to the army’s brutal unleashing of military might on the Pakhtun people and their homeland under the garb of ‘war on terrorism’. (ANI)

ALSO READ: Forex Crisis Puts Pakistan on Lanka Mode

Previous Story

African anti-corruption day

Next Story

Mohammed Ali Al Yamahi being crowned as Arab Reading Champion

Latest from -Top News

Dhaka in Tight Spot Over US Tariffs

The US has identified non-tariff barriers in 13 sectors, including medicine, agriculture, and the environment, and has set nearly half a dozen conditions for effective action. Bangladesh, grappling with sluggish economic growth

Britain’s Bold Move for Kyiv

Healey said on X that at Monday’s UDCG meeting, allies agreed to supply key air defence ammo to Ukraine as part of a 50-day push to arm Kyiv and pressure Putin to

Gita Gopinath to Exit IMF in August

The IMF’s Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva confirmed Gopinath’s departure and said a successor will be named “in due course.”…reports Asian Lite News Gita Gopinath, the First Deputy Managing Director of the International
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Pesticide firms observe strike in Pakistan

The pesticide company also criticised Agriculture Department in this issue

Bilawal Bhutto has serious warning on martial law

Bilawal asked Chief Justice of Pakistan to constitute full court