
Balochistan Abductions: Two Baloch students forcibly disappeared in Turbat; UN experts decry ongoing abductions as international crime
KECH: Two young Baloch students have allegedly been forcibly taken by Pakistsecurity forces in Turbat, the primary city of the Kech district in Balochistan, as reported by The Balochistan Post (TBP).
Tired of too many ads? go ad free now
Seventeen-year-old Shey Haq Baloch, the son of the deceased Altaf Baloch, and sixteen-year-old Adam Baloch, son of Saleem, were purportedly apprehended by security personnel on Tuesday shortly after arriving in Turbat from Karachi, according to TBP.
Nugra Baloch, Shey Haq's sister, verified the occurrence in a Facebook post. She stated that both boys were first-year college students and were detained by Pakistani forces and intelligence agencies, as highlighted by the TBP report.
"I call upon everyone to speak out against this unlawful and cruel act," she wrote. "Assist us in our struggle for the safe return of my brother and Adam Baloch." Shey Haq Baloch's father, Altaf Baloch, was killed in 2008 when Pakistani forces reportedly opened fire on a peaceful rally held by the Baloch National Front (BNF) in Turbat, according to the TBP report.
In another instance on April 30, two young men, Amir, son of Dad Bakhsh, and Usman, son of Abdul Ghani, were reportedly kidnapped from a barber shop in Pasni, in Gwadar district.
Both are locals of the town. A further case has been reported from Turbat's D-Baloch area, where Abdul Majeed, son of Abdul Ghani, was allegedly taken by unidentified armed individuals while he was waiting for transport with his children, as highlighted by the TBP report.
Enforced disappearances in Balochistan
continue to pose a serious and persistent issue. Human rights organisations have long accused Pakistani security agencies of systematically targeting students, activists, and ordinary civilians, according to the TBP report.
Tired of too many ads? go ad free now
Earlier on Tuesday, United Nations human rights experts described the "relentless use of enforced disappearances" in Balochistan as "a severe human rights violation and an international crime" and urged Pakistan to establish "independent and effective mechanisms for searching and investigating," as per the TBP report.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News18
2 hours ago
- News18
Soundly Thrashed, Yet Pakistanis Convince Themselves Of Victory
Last Updated: Operation Sindoor was a resounding success for India, resulting in considerable damage to Pakistan's air defence system and air bases. Yet, Pakistan claims that it won Deceiving others is bad, but deceiving oneself is worse. Having acquired consummate skills in lying to the world about anything, Pakistan's immersion into mendacity is complete. It can no longer distinguish between fact and fiction—and between defeat and triumph. It got smacked in the four-day skirmish with India last month; there is a mountain of evidence (including videos by Pakistani social media) to prove that Operation Sindoor was a resounding success, resulting in considerable damage to Pakistan's air defence system and air bases. And Pakistan's reaction? It claimed that it won! Never was a lie as blatant. Six days after the cessation of hostilities, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said in a statement, 'This is a victory of the Armed Forces of Pakistan as well as the self-reliant, proud, and dignified Pakistani nation. The entire nation is standing by the armed forces like a wall made of lead." The Army chief, Gen Syed Asim Munir, was made Field Marshal. It is not just the Pakistani government and military that claimed to have emerged victorious in a skirmish in which they were soundly thrashed; people believed in the lie. A Gallup Pakistan survey conducted between May 11 and 15 showed that 96 per cent of more than 500 respondents believed Pakistan had won the conflict," Al Jazeera reported. 'Initial data and survey trends shared exclusively with Al Jazeera showed 82 per cent rated the military's performance as 'very good,' with fewer than 1 per cent expressing disapproval. Most significantly, 92 per cent said their opinion of the military improved as a result of the conflict." Pakistanis, however, don't need a Copperfield to create a new reality; they themselves do it—and fall in love with it. Conspicuously, the Pakistani people did not fall prey to the propaganda by Rawalpindi and Islamabad; they chose to ignore the zillion social media videos they themselves had made and circulated showing attacks on their air bases and other places. Rejecting the sanctity of sensory perception, commonsense, and reason, and refusing to accept the unmistakable weaknesses of their military, they found refuge in the Islamist fantasy of the invincibility of the ghazi, the jihadist soldier. It needs to be mentioned here that the Western mainstream media and the Trump administration underpinned Pakistanis' self-deception. It took foreign journalists several days to realize that India had licked Pakistan. So, the New York Times reported on May 14, 'Where India appears to have had a clear edge is in its targeting of Pakistan's military facilities and airfields, as the latter stretch of fighting shifted from symbolic strikes and shows of force to attacks on each other's defense capabilities." Yet, Pakistan keeps celebrating its 'victory.' Most Pakistanis genuinely believe that they have won the military conflict with India. Pakistan may be a military dictatorship, but its state, deep state, and society are symbiotically intertwined. It is a weird totalitarianism. George Orwell, Rightists' favourite Leftist, is often quoted in describing and explaining totalitarianism, the ruthless exercise of power, the abuse of language, and so on. But even his genius will not be able to fully explain the monstrosity that Pakistan is. O'brien, the party commissar who tricks the protagonist Winston of 1984 into believing in him, tells him, 'We control matter because we control the mind. Reality is inside the skull. You will learn by degrees, Winston. There is nothing that we could not do. Invisibility, levitation—anything. I could float off this floor like a soap bubble if I wished to. I do not wish to, because the Party does not wish it. You must get rid of those nineteenth-century ideas about the laws of nature. We make the laws of nature." Winston rightly finds all this utter nonsense; though not philosophically sophisticated, he even knows that there is a word to describe this stupid theory. O'brien helps him: 'I told you, Winston," he says, 'that metaphysics is not your strong point. The word you are trying to think of is solipsism. But you are mistaken. This is not solipsism." Then the commissar goes on to explain, 'The real power, the power we have to fight for night and day, is not power over things, but over men." He continues: 'Obedience is not enough… Power is in inflicting pain and humiliation. Power is in tearing human minds to pieces and putting them together again in new shapes of your own choosing." Orwell's narrative beautifully describes the evil of a communist state, but Pakistan is even worse. It doesn't have a party; it has an army—and it has radical Islam. Radical Islam tears human minds to pieces, bestialises hearts, and coarsens sensibilities. And it makes the adherents see what they want to see. So, they see defeat as victory. Location : New Delhi, India, India First Published: June 08, 2025, 19:47 IST News opinion Opinion | Soundly Thrashed, Yet Pakistanis Convince Themselves Of Victory


Hindustan Times
2 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Woman torture case: Police launches probe
Kolkata, Police have launched a search for the mother-son duo who allegedly detained and assaulted a woman in their residence in Domjur in Howrah district for refusing to act in a pornographic film, an officer said on Sunday. The 23-year-old woman, a resident of Sodepur in North 24 Parganas district, is undergoing treatment at the College of Medicine & Sagore Dutta Hospital, the officer of Barrackpore Police Commissionerate said. "The accused woman and her son are absconding and a search for them has been launched. We are trying to probe whether they were running any pornography film racket in the veil of running an event management agency," an officer of Howrah City Police said. Sources in the police said that the accused woman, along with her son, was also running a film production house where "soft pornographic reels" were shot. "Initial probe has revealed that they used to lure young girls looking for employment under the pretext of a good salary and then force them to take part in films with pornographic content," the officer said. The accused woman was also allegedly running a sex racket in the area, he said, adding that it was also being probed. The victim alleged that more than the son, his mother used to torture her during her "captivity" at their Domjur residence. "I want the police to arrest the woman. She used to torture me the most. She used to beat me while this guy, her son, used to watch that from a distance," she said. The victim had come in contact with the man from Howrah's Domjur on Facebook last year. He had promised her a job if she came to his residence, a police officer said. When she visited his Domjur residence to discuss the job, the youth, along with his mother, allegedly assaulted her after failing to lure her into the profession of a bar dancer and forced her to do domestic chores, the woman's parents said in the police complaint lodged at Khardah police station. The victim has also claimed that her mobile phone was taken away by the two accused.
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
2 hours ago
- First Post
Pakistan's fantasies of hitting Indian air bases exposed by satellite image analyst
In the weeks following Operation Sindoor, Pakistan has repeatedly claimed it inflicted significant damage on Indian military infrastructure, including airbases and high-value defense systems. But a detailed analysis by independent satellite imagery analyst Damien Symon suggests those claims are unfounded, with multiple images found to be either doctored or misrepresented. Symon, who has been examining the visuals circulated by Islamabad, said that assertions made by Pakistani officials and media — including strikes on a Sukhoi fighter jet and an S-400 air defense unit — do not hold up against verified satellite data. Adampur airbase: No Sukhoi hit One of Pakistan's most prominent claims involved a purported strike on a Sukhoi-30MKI at the Adampur airbase in Punjab. An image shared by pro-Pakistan accounts showed what appeared to be a burn mark near a jet. However, Symon confirmed the image pre-dated the conflict and the jet was not a Sukhoi but a MiG-29 undergoing maintenance. The dark patch near the aircraft was engine soot, not bomb damage. Bhuj airbase: No damage to S-400 STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Another claim pointed to an alleged strike on an S-400 system at Bhuj airbase in Gujarat. Imagery showed dark patches on the ground, described as missile impact zones. Symon said the marks were oil stains in a vehicle yard, not missile craters. The image was also captured before the hostilities began. Adampur again: Digitally altered images In a separate instance, Pakistan alleged missile damage to an S-400 battery at Adampur. Satellite photos used to support this were digitally edited, with black dots added to simulate craters. Symon compared them with current, unedited images, which showed no such damage. Naliya airbase: Cloud shadow, not bomb damage Another claim involved an image from Naliya airbase that allegedly showed scorched ground from a bombing raid. Symon identified the darkened area as a cloud shadow on the runway, not damage from an attack. Srinagar airport: No visible impact A blurry image of Srinagar airport was circulated online to support claims of a Pakistani strike. High-resolution satellite imagery from multiple sources and dates, however, showed no damage to the civilian apron or surrounding areas. Chinese satellite firm cited in false claim Adding to the narrative, Pakistan shared imagery from a Chinese satellite company to assert damage at Adampur airbase. Symon said the alleged damage was a pre-existing mark visible in older satellite captures. Jammu airport: Another false claim Visuals claiming damage at Jammu airport showed darkened spots near the runway, which Symon's analysis debunked. Post-strike satellite images confirmed the airport remained undamaged. The circulated image had been digitally manipulated, he said. Prime Minister visit signals normalcy Shortly after Operation Sindoor, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the Adampur airbase, and photographs from the event showed the absence of any substantial damage and directly challenging Pakistan's narrative.