The Baloch Students Organization (BSO) has condemned the persistent and systemic practice of enforced disappearances in Balochistan, calling it a glaring violation of human rights. In a statement issued on International Human Rights Day, the organization’s central spokesperson condemned the illegal abductions of Baloch youth and political workers, describing them as part of a decades-long campaign to silence dissent in the region.
The BSO specifically highlighted the recent disappearance of National Democratic Party (NDP) leaders from Karachi, labeling it as yet another chapter in the ongoing saga of abductions. “The enforced disappearances of NDP leaders reflect the state’s continuous attempts to stifle political activism,” the spokesperson said, urging their immediate release.
The statement further decried the broader impact of these abductions, noting that many political leaders have spent years in secret detention centers. Families of the disappeared are left in anguish, with no information about their loved ones, while victims are subjected to physical and psychological abuse in undisclosed locations.
The spokesperson for BSO Pajjar echoed similar sentiments, accusing state institutions of systematically targeting Balochistan’s brightest minds. “Every day, masked men abduct our talented youth, reducing them to mere shadows of their former selves through torture and isolation,” they said. “The families left behind wait endlessly, while the state — the supposed guardian of its people — betrays them in the most inhumane way possible.”
On International Human Rights Day, BSO Pajjar called for a united global response, urging international human rights organizations to intervene. The group demanded immediate action to halt these abductions and ensure accountability for those responsible.