Human rights champion Sammee Deen Baloch, steering the Baloch Yakjehti Committee, argues Pakistan’s deepest Balochistan wound is cultural identity, not separatist fights.
Authorities frame Baloch as perpetual foes, igniting abuses that spare no one: men hauled away, women vanished, kids murdered in cold blood.
On X, Baloch laid bare the truth: ‘State ire fixes on Baloch labels alone. Policies wipe out our men, women, young, old, children. Resistance? No—their beef is our being.’
The anti-terror banner waves high to cloak these acts, Baloch revealed, fooling outsiders. ‘Pregnant women and 13-year-olds as militants? That’s your counter-terror logic?’
Islamabad swats away Baloch genocide cries as fiction. Baloch insists: ‘Systematic identity annihilation, blind to innocence, screams genocide.’
Baloch blasted moral decay. ‘Nations at war shield the defenseless. Here, Baloch ‘enemies’ face a power stripped of civility or compassion. Laws mock us from pages.’
Years of documented horrors plague Balochistan—state death squads greenlit for abductions, off-the-books killings, sham detentions. Baloch’s clarion call demands world reckoning.