24-05-2025
Gunmen kill journalist in southwestern Pakistan
QUETTA: Unknown armed men stormed a house in Balochistan's Awaran district in the early hours of Saturday and killed a journalist working for a mainstream news channel and a local newspaper, a Levies official said.
The killing took place in Mashkay, a remote town in the mountainous Awaran district, regarded as a stronghold of Baloch separatist groups, particularly the Baloch Liberation Front (BLF).
Balochistan, Pakistan's largest but least developed province, is home to a separatist insurgency led by ethnic Baloch groups, which Islamabad accuses of being backed by India.
New Delhi denies the allegation.
Earlier this month, Pakistan blamed India for a deadly attack on a school van in Khuzdar district that killed eight people, including six schoolchildren.
Zulqarnain Baloch, a Levies official in Mashkay, told Arab News that unidentified gunmen entered journalist Latif Baloch's house at 3 a.m. and shot him dead while he was asleep with his family.
'The attackers only targeted him,' he said, adding: 'Motives behind the murder are being investigated.'
According to the Press Freedom Network, an advocacy organization for media rights in Pakistan, 53 journalists were killed in the country between 2012 and 2022.
Hameedullah Sherani, the network's provincial coordinator in Balochistan, said journalists in the province face serious threats while carrying out their work.
'Journalists in Balochistan have been working under threats by the state and non-state actors,' he said. 'More than 40 journalists in Balochistan have lost their lives in the line of duty over the last two decades.'
The Balochistan Union of Journalists (BUJ) strongly condemned the killing and called for a high-level investigation.
'The provincial government must arrest the attackers behind the killing of Latif Baloch,' said Khalil Ahmed, BUJ president. 'Journalists are already facing severe threats in the sensitive region of Balochistan. The government has to take immediate action for the safety of working journalists.'
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.
Balochistan, which borders Iran and Afghanistan, remains one of Pakistan's most dangerous regions for journalists.