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Pak police forcefully abducts & disappears 11 Pashtun activists from Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa

In the latest crackdown against Pashtuns, the police in Pakistan has arrested, abducted and disappeared 11 Pashtun activists from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

The Chaman Police have detained Fida Mohammad Qabail, a member of the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement (PTM) South Pakhtunkhwa Central Committee. Shockingly, neither the victim nor his family has been informed of the reasons behind the arrest or the filing of an FIR.

Earlier on same day, Parachinar Police apprehended PTM Provincial coordinator Khabarul Amin Khan, along with Liaqat Yousafzai, Bilal Orakzai, and Mustafa Kamal from Parachinar city.

Six other Pashtun Activists abducted and disappeared

Furthermore, six other Pashtun Activists, associated with PTM, were abducted by the Khurram district police and have since disappeared without a trace, adding to the growing concerns over their whereabouts.

PTM, a Pashtun rights organization, is known for organizing peaceful protests to shed light on the persecution faced by the Pashtun community at the hands of the Pakistan Army. It has also exposed the collusion between the Army and the terrorists, who together destabilize the region for their own gains, leaving the local Pashtun population in distress.

These recent abductions, arrests, and enforced disappearances are part of Pakistan’s efforts to silence dissenting voices. With nearly a dozen individuals detained or abducted within two days without any legal basis, it underscores the vulnerable situation faced by Pashtuns in the country.

J&K Police ramps up security with AI-based face recognition system in Ramban

The Jammu and Kashmir Police have introduced an AI-based face recognition system near a tunnel on the Jammu-Srinagar National Highway in Ramban district, officials announced on Friday.

Equipped with high-focus CCTV cameras, the system, reportedly, utilizes a database containing images of militants, overground workers, and criminals. When vehicles pass through the area, the cameras screen the faces of individuals inside, triggering an alert to police if a match is found with any photograph in the database.

Developed by a Chennai-based company, this technology was initially deployed in Kishtwar district’s Thathri area in December. Now, the Navayuga checking plaza in Ramban district’s Banihal region becomes the second location, after Kishtwar, to implement the system.

Notably, this AI-based face recognition system possess the capability to match photographs even if individuals are wearing masks, enhancing their effectiveness in identifying potential threats.

Bomb blast in Khuzdar kills Khuzdar Press Club President

An explosion rocked the Chamrok area of Khuzdar city in Pak-occupied-Balochistan on Friday, killing the president of the Khuzdar Press Club, Maulana Muhammad Siddique Mengal, and injuring 9 others.

In the explosion, local journalist Mohammad Siddique Mengal was killed. The blast targeted Mengal’s vehicle on the central highway in the afternoon hours. He was the president of the Khuzdar Press Club and associated with a local newspaper.

“Mohammad Siddique Mengal was on his way from home to the university when the explosive device detonated”, the city’s police station house officer (SHO) stated.

An investigation into the incident has been initiated.

This latest bombing comes nearly a year after Mengal narrowly survived an assassination attempt by unidentified motorcycle assailants in Khuzdar’s Khattan Bund area in August 2022.

Gwadar farm fencing: China and Pakistan’s surveillance tool

Baloch student and nationalist groups have strongly condemned the construction of barriers by Pak forces on agricultural lands in Gwadar, as it an attempt to displace local farmers from their ancestral lands.

In a statement, the Baloch Students Organization (BSO) said the fencing of agricultural fields by Army is causing immense distress to farmers who depend on these lands for their livelihood. It cited these actions as evidence of Balochistan being under “occupation” of the Pak Army.

The BSO explained that a project labeled the ‘Safe City Project’ was launched in Gwadar in recent years to hasten the exploitation of the area. Initially involving barricading the entire city, it was suspended following resistance from Baloch political groups.

However, the Army has now resumed erecting barricades around a particular section of Gwadar, citing “security” reasons. This section includes vital agricultural fields sustaining local farmers’ livelihoods.

“Gwadar’s puppet representative was present at the meeting where this egregious decision was made and is actively supporting it. The BSO has issued a warning to officials to cease the project or face mobilization against it.

Meanwhile, the spokesperson for the Baloch Yakjehti Committee also expressed deep concern over the fencing. BYC said that this “colonial project” aimed at displacing indigenous populations. The spokesperson said protests and a resistance movement against the fencing would soon be announced.

They highlighted the allocation of 50 million rupees in the 2020-21 federal budget for fencing Gwadar, which was initially halted but is now being revived by the Balochistan’s puppet authority.

The planned fencing of 24 sq km in Gwadar, a key area under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), with over 500 surveillance cameras and two entry points has raised fears of increased surveillance and control over locals.

The much-hyped infrastructure projects that the Chinese promised at the cost of the Baloch community have fallen short; locals grapple with basics like clean water and electricity.

Abduction of father & son duo by Pak Army from Pak-occupied Balochistan

In yet another case of enforced disappearance, Pak Army raided a house and abducted a father-son duo from the Sui area of Pak-occupied-Balochistan’s Dera Bugti district.

The detainees have been identified as Raheemo Bugti and his son Ameer Bugti. They were picked up by the forces and subsequently moved to an undisclosed location.

Enforced disappearances are a grim reality in the region, with such incidents occurring periodically. Pak Army in collaboration with local death squads, have detained several individuals and relocated them to unknown facilities.

This latest incident adds to the mounting cases of enforced disappearances in Pakistan-occupied Balochistan, where thousands have gone missing over the years, with their dead bodies occasionally resurfacing under mysterious circumstances.

Pakistan’s military and intelligence agencies are solely complicit in the enforced disappearances of Baloch citizens. Numerous video evidence has also emerged, depicting instances of forced abductions carried out by security forces.

Baloch Liberation Army launches coordinated attacks on Pak forces, police in Khuzdar

The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) has claimed responsibility for coordinated attacks targeting Pak security forces and police in Khuzdar district of Pak-occupied-Balochistan on Tuesday.

In a statement issued to the media, BLA spokesperson Jeeyand Baloch said their freedom fighters carried out two separate assaults, resulting in the killing of one personnel and injuries to four others, including an officer.

Jeeyand stated that BLA fighters targeted security checkpoints of a Pak Army camp in the Bazgir area using grenade launchers and automatic weapons. “In the attack, one enemy personnel was killed on the spot and two were injured,” he said.

The spokesperson added that after the initial attack, two police vehicles reached the area. “Our fighters then targeted the vehicle of the Crime Investigation Agency (CIA) with a remote-controlled IED attack as per their plan,” Jeeyand said.

He revealed that the blast left two personnel, including CIA Khuzdar in-charge Maqbool Musiani, injured while their vehicle suffered severe damage.

Jeeyand Baloch asserted that the BLA takes responsibility for both attacks on the “occupying Pak forces and their collaborators.” He warned that such offensive actions will continue.

Since 1947, Pak Army has forcefully occupied Balochistan leaving the Baloch community oppressed and alienated. Therefore, freedom groups have taken up arms to make their motherland free from oppression and make a place where the community will live in peace and happiness.

UN calls for release of detained Uyghur refugees in Thailand

The World Uyghur Congress (WUC) welcomed a recent call from the United Nations urging the Thai government to release 43 Uyghur refugees who have been arbitrarily detained for over a decade. In a statement released on Wednesday, the WUC expressed appreciation for the UN’s voice raised in support of the detained Uyghurs.

The UN letter, written in February 2023, urged Thai authorities to provide information on the prolonged detention of the Uyghur men, their access to medical care, and the detention conditions where they are being held. The letter also sought details on measures being taken to facilitate communication and visitation rights with families and legal representatives.

UN experts said that the detention conditions of the 43 Uyghur migrants may amount to cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or even torture, which has reportedly caused the deaths of five Uyghur migrant detainees, including two minors.

From Xinjiang to Thai Camps

The UN expressed “serious concern” regarding the forcible return of 109 Uyghurs in 2015 “without an assessment of their protection needs under international human rights and refugee laws.” They urged the Royal Thai government to safeguard the human rights of migrants, ensuring full adherence to the principle of non-refoulement.

Dolkun Isa, the president of the World Uyghur Congress, stated, “There needs to be an end to the indefinite and arbitrary detention of the Uyghur men in Thailand. They should not be detained for fleeing from a repressive environment out of fear of the genocidal policies in East Turkistan.”

The WUC press statement said that Uyghurs are increasingly recognized as a persecuted group in East Turkistan (Xinjiang), facing arbitrary detention, mass surveillance, separation of families, torture, forced labor, and other human rights atrocities. Those residing outside China continue to face state-led repression abroad, with Uyghurs living in third countries without firm settlement status being particularly vulnerable to detention and forced return.

China’s Abuses

Since March 2014, at least 43 Uyghur men have been held at the IDC Suan Phlu Immigration Detention Centre in Bangkok, Thailand, under inhumane and overcrowded conditions. They were part of a larger group of 350 Uyghur refugees who fled China in 2014, attempting to reach Turkey through Thailand to escape persecution in East Turkistan.

In July 2015, 173 Uyghur women and children were transferred to Turkey, while 109 men, women, and children were forcibly returned to China, where their current whereabouts are unknown. According to the WUC, since 2014, a reported number of five Uyghurs, including two children, have died within the Thai Immigration Centers due to catastrophic conditions.

The WUC urged the Thai authorities and Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin to immediately release the detained Uyghurs and to resolutely avoid refoulement, while enabling resettlement options as soon as possible.

Plight of Uyghurs

Meanwhile, a U.S. Labor Department official stated that international companies cannot responsibly operate in Xinjiang due to forced labor concerns and should leave the western Chinese region. The U.S. government says Chinese officials continue to commit genocide and crimes against humanity against Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in Xinjiang, while rights groups have pressured Western companies there to audit their operations over forced labor concerns.

The suppression of Uyghur culture extends far beyond the internment camps. Authorities are limiting the use of the Uyghur language, censoring Uyghur history, prohibiting fasting during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, demolishing mosques, restricting religious classes, and forbidding Islamic clothing and names.

The Chinese government has built a draconian surveillance apparatus in the Xinjiang region, implementing facial recognition systems, tracking technology, surveillance applications, and police checkpoints throughout cities. Despite citing the “three evils” of terrorism, separatism, and religious extremism to justify the internment of Uyghurs, however there is no evidence of widespread religious radicalism among the Uyghur population. In addition, mass sterilization and intrauterine contraceptive device implantation programs are employed to systematically reduce the Uyghur population to an insignificant minority.

Protests at Balochistan University against the arrest of two faculty members

Tensions escalated at the Balochistan University of Information Technology, Engineering and Management Sciences (BUITEMS) as two faculty members, Sohail Anwar and Akram Baloch, were arrested on the university premises in a fabricated and baseless case.

The arrests sparked outrage from student organizations and academic bodies, who condemned the university’s actions and says that the administration is suppressing dissent and targeting vocal critics.

A student group, issued a statement denouncing the arrests as an attempt by the administration to “sabotage the association and elections”. The panel said that the arrests were “punishment” for their efforts to hold the administration accountable for corruption and irregularities.

“We want to make it clear to the administration that we are determined to expose your corruption, irregularities, and misdeeds, no matter how high-handed tactics you adopt,” the statement read.

The Academic Staff Association University of Turbat (ASAUT) also strongly condemned the arrests, saying that the “incompetent administration” of BUITEMS of resorting to police cooperation to silence faculty members and cover up misdeeds.

“The incompetent administration has resorted to arresting faculty members with the help of puppet police to cover up its misdeeds so that the respected teachers remain silent on the misdeeds of the incompetent administration,” said the ASAUT spokesperson.

The spokesperson further stated that ASAUT has always stood shoulder to shoulder with faculty members in the fight for their legitimate rights and will continue to do so.

Meanwhile, the Baloch Students Organization Panjgur (BSO Panjgur) also condemned the arrests, calling them “extremely shameful and intolerable.” The BSO Panjgur said that the Army apparatus of attacking the “aware class” of Pak-occupied-Balochistan, referring to respected teachers and academics.

This episode sheds light on the broader issue of discrimination and repression faced by dissenting individuals who are vocal and fight injustices. Since Pak Army forcefully occupied Balochistan, basic rights as well as academic freedom and the right to dissent have always come at a price.

Manipur completes first phase of deportation of illegal Myanmar immigrants

Manipur Chief Minister N Biren Singh announced on Thursday that the first phase of deportation of illegal Myanmar immigrants has been successfully completed in Manipur, with 38 immigrants exiting the country via Moreh.

Taking to X, the chief minister shared the news along with photographs of the formal deportation process. He stated, “Without any discrimination, we have completed the first phase of deportation of illegal immigrants from Myanmar with 38 more immigrants leaving Manipur, India today through Moreh. A total of 77 illegal immigrants have been deported in the first phase.”

Singh further revealed that one Indian national was also repatriated from Myanmar during the handover ceremony. He emphasized the state government’s commitment to identifying illegal immigrants and recording biometric data.” Let’s keep our borders and country secure,” he added.

https://twitter.com/NBirenSingh/status/1785972790929088630?t=y_JUq5d-soGhbUB-bbLFvg&s=19

Last month, Singh raised concerns about the unnatural growth of 996 new villages with illegal immigration population, citing the threat it poses to indigenous people and national security. Addressing the issue on X, he questioned, “Will anyone accept the unnatural growth of new villages and population, causing massive changes to the demography in their own state or country due to the influx of illegal immigrants?”

Singh highlighted the challenges faced in Manipur, where numerous new villages have emerged due to an influx of illegal immigrants from Myanmar since 2006. He expressed concern over the destruction of massive forest cover to establish settlements and carry out illegal activities such as poppy plantations.During the last state assembly session, Singh disclosed that 6,746 illegal Myanmarese individuals were detected in Manipur from May 3 last year to February 27 this year in response to a question by opposition Congress MLA Th Lokeshwor.

POGB women block Karakoram Highway in protest over frequent power cuts & wheat flour crisis

Women in Pakistan-occupied Gilgit-Baltistan (POGB) are taking to the streets to protest against prolonged power outages and the wheat crisis, blocking the Karakoram Highway as part of their demonstration.

This protest represents the ongoing struggle of the people of POGB for access to wheat flour and consistent electricity supply. Despite the region’s potential to generate electricity for a significant portion of Pakistan, it continues to face severe shortages and load shedding. This is primarily due to the electricity generated being transmitted to Pakistan and then sold back to the region at high prices, leading to massive power cuts.

The POGB Awami Action Committee initiated a months-long protest against the removal of wheat flour subsidies, load shedding, and the Revenue Act, among other grievances. These demands were compiled in a Charter of Demands and presented to the occupying government. After numerous rounds of negotiations, some of the demands were partially met, leading to the conclusion of the prolonged protest at Ittehad Chowk, Gilgit.

However, despite the partial concessions, there has been little progress made by the puppet government in POGB to address the broader concerns of the people. While there was a temporary reduction in wheat prices following multiple increases, the underlying issues persist.

Now, with the problems still unresolved, the people of POGB, especially women, are taking to the streets once again in protest. The recent demonstration on the Karakoram Highway is likely just the beginning, with more protests expected in the days to come.