At least three Liberal secular activists allegedly abducted by Pakistani agencies

LordOfTheUnderworlds

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 9, 2013
Messages
1,299
Likes
1,379
Country flag
http://www.dawn.com/news/1307195

At least four human rights activists known on social media for their leftist views have gone missing this week, relatives and NGO workers told AFP on Sunday, as analysts voiced rights concerns.

Two of the men — Waqas Goraya and Asim Saeed — disappeared on January 4, according to a cybersecurity NGO, while Salman Haider vanished on Friday and Ahmed Raza Naseer Saturday, relatives said.

The interior ministry has said it will investigate the disappearance of Haider, who is known for his outspoken views on enforced disappearances in Balochistan, but made no reference to the others. All four were active on social media groups.

Know more: Missing persons

Pakistan is routinely ranked among the world's most dangerous for journalists, and reporting critical of the military is considered a major red flag, with journalists at times detained, beaten and even killed.

“The state has controlled TV and now they're focusing on digital spaces,” said Raza Rumi, a writer and analyst who left Pakistan in 2014 after he was attacked by gunmen who shot his driver dead.

A security source denied intelligence services were involved in the disappearances.

Naseer, who suffers from polio, was taken from his family's shop in central Punjab province, his brother Tahir told AFP Sunday.

Hours after Haider was due home Friday evening, his wife received a text message from his phone saying he was leaving his car on the Islamabad expressway, his brother Faizan told AFP.

Also read: 728 added to list of missing persons in 2016

Police later found the car and registered a missing persons report. Faizan said his brother had not received any specific threats.

Waqas Goraya, who is usually a resident of the Netherlands, was picked up on January 4, as was Aasim Saeed, said Shahzad Ahmed, head of cyber security NGO Bytes for All.

“None of these activists have been brought to any court of law or levelled with any charges. Their status disappearance is very worrying not only for the families, but also for citizens and larger social media users in the country,” Ahmad said.

Also read: ‘Military courts convicted five missing persons’

In 2014, when sectarian killings were rife, Salman Haider had penned a poem titled‘Kafir’, which quickly went viral on social media. The poem critiqued the intolerance prevailing in the country and quickly garnered critical acclaim.

Haider is a lecturer at Fatima Jinnah Women University (FJWU) in Rawalpindi, an actor, writer and a human rights activist, police said, adding that investigators have started examining his social media accounts and e-mail address, as well as combing his mobile phone records.

A case has been registered under Section 365 of the Pakistan Penal Code, which deals with “kidnapping or abducting with intent secretly and wrongfully to confine a person”, at the Loi Bher police station.

Police were also collecting information regarding his activism, the officer said, adding that “although a kidnapping case has been registered, investigators are still not in any position to pinpoint the motive; whether it is a kidnapping or a forced disappearance”.

“An investigation is ongoing and we are thoroughly examining all aspects of the case.”

@Zarvan @Neo @safriz @Zulfiqar Khan Is Salman Haider Shia Kafir?

Any relationship with the news of Raheel Sharif Joining middle East military coalition as mercenary?

Or something related with change of guard in army and ISI leadership?
 
Last edited:

Hassain Ghazini

Regular Member
Joined
Nov 1, 2016
Messages
89
Likes
80
If someone falls off a step in Balochistan, you guys will blame it on ISI as a conspiracy against Baloch. Really get a life...

This has nothing to do with 'Pakistani agencies'. Salman Haider himself has constantly praised Pakistan Army's involvement in uplifting poverty, building schools and improving security. He was a critique of the MQM which is notorious for using abductions and target-killings as a political tool. The other two, I don't know jack shit about - probably also got entangled in political drama.

As of now, there is a province-wide manhunt.

https://en.dailypakistan.com.pk/headline/nisar-orders-immediate-recovery-of-activist-salman-haider/
 
  • Like
Reactions: Neo

Neo

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 17, 2009
Messages
4,514
Likes
964
If someone falls off a step in Balochistan, you guys will blame it on ISI as a conspiracy against Baloch. Really get a life...

This has nothing to do with 'Pakistani agencies'. Salman Haider himself has constantly praised Pakistan Army's involvement in uplifting poverty, building schools and improving security. He was a critique of the MQM which is notorious for using abductions and target-killings as a political tool. The other two, I don't know jack shit about - probably also got entangled in political drama.

As of now, there is a province-wide manhunt.

https://en.dailypakistan.com.pk/headline/nisar-orders-immediate-recovery-of-activist-salman-haider/
Don't even reply to such brainless troll posts mate.

BTW, some interesting news coming from India regarding Om Puri who may not have died of a natural cause...
 

Johny_Baba

अज्ञानी
Senior Member
Joined
May 21, 2016
Messages
3,822
Likes
19,578
Country flag
As usual,bakis are in 'Denial' mode.
 

Zarvan

Regular Member
Joined
Apr 21, 2014
Messages
638
Likes
300

Bornubus

Chodi Bhakt & BJPig Hunter
Senior Member
Joined
Oct 13, 2015
Messages
7,494
Likes
17,198
They were busy talking shit against Islam finally agencies have done the job. All other western paid seculars will also face wrath of Army.
When will your Army free Kashmir ? We are also busy talking shit against Islam in Kashmir.
 

vinuzap

Regular Member
Joined
Nov 15, 2016
Messages
509
Likes
693
yes bengalis where talking shit about porkistani army so indians freed them and looks like same will happen to balochs as well

mass humiliation of porkistani army and there pimp is going on in every international forum : last month

http://balochistantimes.com/baloch-groups-hold-joint-rallies-world-hr-day/

Baloch groups hold joint rallies on World HR Day
News Desk December 11, 2016


After years of separation, a number of Baloch nationalist groups jointly held protest rallies on the World Human Rights Day to highlight human rights abuses in Balochistan.

The Baloch National Movement (BNM), the Baloch Republican Party (BRP), the Baloch Republican Students Organization (BRSO) and the Baloch Students Organization (BSO) held joint demonstrations in different countries of the world to protest what they called “war crimes” by the Pakistan military in Balochistan.

Rallies were held in Australia, Canada, Germany, South Korea, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.

Nationalist activism, especially of the groups seeking separation from Pakistan, is not allowed in Balochistan, and the participants might face immediate threat to their lives.




Sher Muhammad Bugti and Mansoor Baloch from the BRP, Hammal Haider and Naseem Baloch from the BNM, Latif Johar and Niaz Baloch from the BSO led protests in different cities of the world.

Most of the participants were political refugees or those in the process of seeking political asylum.

After Pakistan’s paramilitary Frontier Corps, in coordination with the country’s mighty intelligence agencies, initiated the so-called kill-and-dump operations, as called by human rights groups, to curb a separatist insurgency in Balochistan, hundreds of Baloch political activists have fled to the Gulf or European countries to save their lives.

Participants of the rallies were carrying placards and banners appealing to the United Nations and the international community to intervene and help put an end to “Pakistani war crimes against the Baloch people”.

Those leading the rallies demanded “Pakistan being held accountable for the crimes against humanity and for the withdrawal of Pakistan’s membership from the UN for its failure to abide by the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, the Geneva Convention or any of the UN’s agreements on human rights”.

Such jointly-held rallies have not been witnessed since last many years, after the major Baloch nationalist groups developed differences among themselves.

However, in October this year, BRP chief Brahumdagh Bugti and BNM chief Khalil Baloch issued a joint statement after a telephonic conversation that they were approaching towards some sort of cooperation.

A source told the BT it was their first one-to-one talk in the last one-and-a-half years.

Earlier this month, leaders of the two parties met in Geneva and expressed their commitment to mutual cooperation in the future.
 

vinuzap

Regular Member
Joined
Nov 15, 2016
Messages
509
Likes
693
earlier:

http://www.thenewsminute.com/articl...rnalists-pakistan-targets-intellectuals-50651


By Ahmar Mustikhan

Dozens of Baloch journalists, intellectuals, educationists and poets have become victims of enforced disappearances and fallen prey to the Pakistan state’s kill and dump policy in the last six years, or simply shot dead.

The recent case in point is that of a prominent intellectual Wahid Baloch, editor of the Balochi language magazine Balochi Labzank and in-charge of the world’s best Balochi language library Sayad Hashmi Reference Library in Malir, Karachi. Wahid Baloch was forcibly abducted by the Pakistani intelligence personnel on July 26 2016 without any charge. Nothing is known about his whereabouts as yet.

The Amnesty International issued an alert on his abduction rather swiftly saying Wahid Baloch “is at grave risk of ill-treatment, torture, or even death. Scores of other activists who have been forcibly disappeared in Karachi and the neighbouring province of Balochistan have suffered similar fates in recent years.” Human Rights Watch executive director Ken Roth tweeted the man fought against disappearances but became a victim himself.

“His love for Balochi language and literature was legendary. His close circle of friends say he was not only a voracious reader but also a keen collector of books and knew of every single second-hand book shop where, for example, a Kafka could be secured for a bargain,” says Nasir Abbas, former editor Dawn. While in London as a BBC producer, Abbas wrote an article wrote an article appealing to the powers-that-be to spare the Baloch scholar.

Mindful of the extreme torture he is facing in a Gestapo-style dungeon, Wahid Baloch’s daughter Hani Baloch wrote, “I imagine you are in pain. I'd give anything for your safe recovery. If I can find you, I will never let you go again.” Her impassioned appeal fell on the deaf ears of the Pakistan secret services. Imtiaz Baloch, a friend of Wahid Baloch, who is now a Canadian citizen notes “For years, Wahid Baloch has been pushing the limits of the ringmaster’s patience. No other factor seems to be attached to his kidnapping except for his decades of work on Balochi literature and his tireless campaigning against enforced disappearances by the Pakistan army.”

Five years ago Professor Saba Dashtiyari, founder of the Sayad Hashmi Reference library, was gunned down as he was a vocal advocate for Balochistan’s right to freedom. Last year, the Deep State –Pakistani intelligence services plus military establishment-- gunned down Karachi liberal intellectual Sabeen Mahmud, after she defied the “angels” or ISI orders not to host a talk about the victims of enforced disappearances in Balochistan. Her killing took place even while guests were still at the venue of the talk, the Second Floor.

Quetta journalist Muhammad Akbar Notezai, writes in The Diplomat that according to the Balochistan Union of Journalists (BUJ), “Balochistan has become a cemetery for journalists.” Two years ago Irshad Mastoi, general secretary of the BUJ, was gunned down at his office in Quetta, along with a trainee reporter Abdul Rasool Khajak and accountant Mohammad Younus. On the day of his death, Mastoi who sympathized with the Balochistan liberation struggle, had posted comments against two politicians, the cleric Tahirul Qadri and cricketer-turned-politician, Imran Khan. Mastoi hinted at the bullying by intelligence services when he said “some institutions consider the media as a resistance group.”

More than three dozen journalists fell prey to Pakistan's cloak-and-dagger games. Prominent among those who were killed and their bodies dumped are Ilyas Nazar, editor of Balochi language Darwanth magazine; Haji Abdul Razzak Baloch and Javed Naseer Rind of Daily Tawar; Razzaq Gul of Daily Express. Even foreign journalists are not spared. "It's a complete nightmare," UK journalist Willem Marx, author of Balochistan at Crossroads, said about the state of press freedom there. "Foreign journalists will simply get deported for reporting on Baluchistan. It's much more of a mortal risk to local journalists." Marx, who was denied visa to go Pakistan because of his book, is right.

International correspondent Declan Walsh, of Irish descent, wrote in The Guardian about Pakistan’s kill and dump policy in France-sized Balochistan: “The bodies surface quietly, like corks bobbing up in the dark. They come in twos and threes, a few times a week, dumped on desolate mountains or empty city roads, bearing the scars of great cruelty. Arms and legs are snapped; faces are bruised and swollen. Flesh is sliced with knives or punctured with drills; genitals are singed with electric prods. In some cases the bodies are unrecognisable, sprinkled with lime or chewed by wild animals. All have a gunshot wound in the head.”

Since truth is death sentence for any rogue, terrorist state, Declan Walsh was subsequently expelled from Pakistan and is still an undesirable person there. British journalist Carlotta Gall, daughter of famous Scottish journalist the late Sandy Gall and reporter for The New York Times, was beaten up by the Pakistani “angels” while she was in Quetta, Balochistan. She wrote in her paper about the incident. “One agent punched me twice in the face and head and knocked me to the floor. I was left with bruises on my arms, temple and cheekbone, swelling on my eye and a sprained knee…. All the people I interviewed were subsequently visited by intelligence agents, and local journalists who helped me were later questioned by Pakistan's intelligence service, the Inter-Services Intelligence.” Since then Gall has written an interesting book The Wrong Enemy, in which “Her evidence that Pakistan fuelled the Taliban and protected Osama bin Laden is revelatory.”

Baloch educationists have fallen prey to terrorist outfits that enjoy ISI blessings. One prominent case is that of US-educated Zahid Askani, who left the comforts of America, to launch co-education school in Gwadar. C. Christine Fair, associate professor at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, who is doing research work on Balochistan as well, was threatened by the Pakistan intelligence services that she will be raped by an entire regiment for exposing the army grandiose, war mongering strategies. “Their tools are crude and include: outright threats; slanderous articles in Pakistani papers and other on-line forums; an army of trolls on twitter and other social media who hound us; and embassy officials who attend and report on our speaking events on Pakistan. But we are lucky to be in the United States: Pakistan’s khaki louts disappear, kidnap and/or kill their critics within Pakistan,” she wrote in the Huffing Post. Former Pakistan ambassador to the U.S. Husain Haqqani author of Pakistan: Between Mosque and Military and his spouse Farahnaz Ispahani, author of Purifying the Land of the Pure: Pakistan’s Religious Minorities are unwelcome in Pakistan simply because of their intellectual efforts to curtail the powers of the Deep State.

(Ahmar Mustikhan is a senior Baloch journalist and founder of the American Friends of Balochistan in Washington DC.)

Note: The views expressed here are the personal opinions of the author.
 

DingDong

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 24, 2014
Messages
3,226
Likes
8,506
Country flag
This is what Pakis are good at, this is what Muslims do, breed like pigs, behave like zombies. We are dealing with a Plague.

They were busy talking shit against Islam finally agencies have done the job. All other western paid seculars will also face wrath of Army.
Just like Paki Jihadis faced the wrath of US drones?
 
Last edited:

vinuzap

Regular Member
Joined
Nov 15, 2016
Messages
509
Likes
693
why you mudered jinnah sister and called her raw agent

why you murdered benazir

why jia ul haq plane surprisingly crashed

why you killed mujibir rahman through proxy

typical chutiya
 

LordOfTheUnderworlds

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 9, 2013
Messages
1,299
Likes
1,379
Country flag
Activist Jibran Nasir urges govt to arrest admins of 'Pakistan Defence'

As peaceful activists continue to disappear mysteriously from the country, civil rights activist Jibran Nasir urged the government to arrest the admins of ‘Pakistan Defence’, a forum on Facebook, which claims to be the “internet’s most authoritative source for news and discussions on Pakistan military”.



“The government must arrest admins of ‘Pakistan Defence’ page and bring them to court for inciting violence against missing activists,” the activist said on Twitter.
‘Pakistan Defence’ on Monday, along with pictures of activists Haider, Goraya and Saeed, wrote: “The group which was running the blasphemous page ‘Bhains‘ on Facebook has been defeated.

jibs-1484040978.jpg
 

rock127

Maulana Rockullah
Senior Member
Joined
Aug 12, 2009
Messages
10,569
Likes
25,231
Country flag
Learn from Mr Zarvan's honesty and explain why you murdered Om Puri?
He loved Pakistan too much and wanted to be born in Pakistan asap.

One night he got too emotional and drank too much and recited Allah Huu Akbar and Inna lillahi wa inallah-e-raji'oon and he freed himself.

He is on his way to Pakistan now.
 

desicanuk

Regular Member
Joined
Nov 7, 2011
Messages
527
Likes
686
Secular Activists Reportedly Kidnapped in Pakistan
At least four secular activists have disappeared in Pakistan in mysterious circumstances in what appears to be coordinating kidnappings.
Mon, January 9, 2017

Four prominent Pakistani activists have been confirmed to have vanished over the weekend, according to NGOs and other activists. Social media reports however suggest that as many as nine have disappeared. All four activists are vocally secular and anti-extremists on social media and have been strongly critical of the Pakistani government’s policies towards human rights.

One activist spoke to Clarion Project on the condition of anonymity. “I think it's an alarming situation that sane rational progressive voices are being abducted. The state on one side talks of NAP [the National Action Plan against terrorism] while it continues to protect terrorists and banned outfits. We appeal to the international community to take notice of these disappearances as we are afraid more would follow.”

The NAP was implemented after the 2014 massacre of schoolchildren by the Taliban in Peshawar.

Salman Haider is a prominent activist who has repeatedly covered stories of enforced disappearances in Balochistan, Pakistan’s most western province, where the Baloch minority has suffered repression at the hands of the state. The Pakistani government has been accused of funding religious extremists and supporting the Taliban in Balochistan in order to oppose democratic Baloch activists who seek greater national rights.

Haider is also a poet and a professor at Fatima Jinnah Women’s University where he teaches gender studies.

He told his wife he would be home at 8 p.m. on Friday evening. He still had not returned home at 10 when she received a text from his phone saying that he was leaving his car on the Islamabad expressway, Salman Haider’s brother Faizan told media.

He has not been heard from since. Police later found the abandoned car and filed a missing person’s report.

His family also said that Salman Haider suffers from allergies and needs his medicine in order to stay alive.

Waqas Goraya and Asim Saeed are both Pakistani but reside in the Netherlands. They were temporarily in Pakistan when they vanished on Friday, FirstPost reported quoting the NGO Bytes for All.

Ahmed Naseer was kidnapped from his family shop in central Punjab province, his brother Tahir told AFP.

“The state has controlled TV and now they're focusing on digital spaces,” Raza Rumi, a Pakistani activist who left the country after an assassination attempt on his life killed his driver in 2014.

News of the disappearances has caused consternation among the community of secular activists in Pakistan. Sources have told Clarion Project that several have gone into hiding, fearful that they may be next to be kidnapped. Speculation is rife about who may be behind this spate of disappearances, with suspicion falling on the army or Pakistan’s feared intelligence agency the ISI.

Although only four disappearances have been confirmed, activists with close ties to the secular community within Pakistan have reported that nine activists have vanished without traces.

Ali Rizvi, the outspoken author of The Atheist Muslim, recorded on his Facebook page, “There is a very serious situation under way for secular/liberal activists in Pakistan, 9 of whom have disappeared right out of the blue. If you're in Pakistan, know that whoever's doing this is targeting you through social media as well. Please unfriend/unfollow any contacts you may have that could put you in focus.”

Another activist posting on Facebook wrote “There are police sirens downstairs. I have locked the outside door from inside and my apartment from outside with an heavy lock.. They will have to break the doors open to find me. Dear friends, good bye, if you do not happen to find me on facebook in the morning. I will try to jump the wall of my next door neighbour and escape disappearance. This is too serious in Lahore too.”

He has not posted since then.
One activist spoke to Clarion Project on the condition of anonymity. “I think it's an alarming situation that sane rational progressive voices are being abducted. The state on one side talks of NAP while it continues to protect terrorists and banned outfits. We appeal to the international community to take notice of these disappearances as we are afraid more would follow.”

The NAP is the National Action Plan to fight terrorism which was implemented after the 2014 massacre of schoolchildren by the Taliban in Peshawar.

https://www.clarionproject.org/news/secular-activists-reportedly-kidnapped-pakistan
 

Latest Replies

Global Defence

New threads

Articles

Top