Remembering Disappeared Baloch on International
Day of the Disappeared
Imran Baluch ( UK )
On 30 August, the International community remembered the missing and disappeared
people throughout the world. The day has been officially declared as the Day
of the Disappeared. On that day, the International Commission on Missing Persons
(ICMP) calls on all governments to provide answers to families on the fate
and whereabouts of missing persons. International Human Rights Organisations
have declared enforced disappearance as a grave human rights violation and
a crime against humanity. On this day, 30th August 2007, the fate of tens of
thousands of innocent Baloch youth and elders remains unknown. Thousands of
Baloch families in Pakistan occupied Balochistan are looking for justice for
their beloveds and peace of mind for themselves in particular and for the Baloch
society in general.
The people in the Pakistan occupied Balochistan are facing
a peculiar situation of uncertainty and injustice. The secret agencies of Pakistani
army, which is ruling the country for the last 60 years one way or the other,
can pick a Baloch at any time with impunity. They do not care whether this
Baloch is 80 years old or a 12 years teenager. In the list of the disappeared
Baloch, many victims have included women and children also. They could be taken
at any time, day or night. Their captors may be in uniform or civilian clothes.
They forcibly take them away, giving no reason, producing no warrant. Their
relatives desperately try to find them, going from one police station or army
camp to the next. The officials deny having arrested them or knowing anything
about their whereabouts or fate. The courts in that ‘God Given Country' are
helpless. A decision made by even an army subaltern carries more weight than
a high court judge does.
Disappeared Baloch persons from Pakistan occupied
Balochistan have been denied the right to a proper arrest and to a fair trial.
There has been evidence of inhuman torture on many of the disappeared persons.
Some have eventually been killed and some have been dumped away in half-dead
condition.
One of the main affect of these enforced disappearances in Balochistan is
the grave socio-economic situation of their families. Many of the disappeared
were the main bread earner for the family and their families are facing immense
financial hardship.
All the well-known human rights organizations and other
concerned institutions have been voicing their serious concern regarding
the fate of missing persons in Pakistani Balochistan. Internationally, Pakistan
has been identified as one of the countries with high numbers of enforced
disappearances unfortunately; most of these forced disappearances took place
in Balochistan. Currently more then 6000 Baloch youth/ political activists
are either missing or being tortured in the Pakistan 's army secret dungeons.
This inhuman behaviour of Pakistan has forced hundreds of the Baloch women
and children to take into streets and protest against forced disappearances,
torture and extra judicial killings of Baloch youth. This is an act, which
is indicative of extreme conditions and desperation of Baloch masses where
women held the utmost respect and not supposed to take to street on political
or social issues.
Enforced disappearance of Baloch elders and youth by Pakistani
armed forces violates the rights of both the disappeared person and their relatives
and the Baloch society as a whole. The clear responsibility to provide answers
regarding the fate of missing persons lies with the government of Pakistan
as government secret agencies and it armed forces are responsible for these
enforced disappearances. Nevertheless, it is now an open secret that Pakistan
has neither any respect of National and International human rights laws or
it has any tradition to respect value or human lives. This has been particularly
obvious regarding their attitude and behaviour vis a vis Baloch people.
The
only hope left for the Baloch is the support of international community. It
is the moral obligation and duty of International Human Right Groups, International
Commission on Missing Persons (ECMP) , UN, EU and all freeborn people to put
pressures on Pakistan regarding enforced disappearances, torture, extra judicial
arrests and gross human rights violations in Balochistan, as currently the
fate of tens of thousands remains unknown. The Baloch are looking for justice
and peace of mind. There will be no peace mind for their families until their
beloved who have been forcefully taken away from them are found and the perpetrators
of inhuman crimes are brought to justice. |