Saturday, January 24, 2026
News

BYC rejects CTD allegations, calls accusations "suppression, not counter-terrorism": Sammi Deen Baloch

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

Quetta (Balochistan) | January 10, 2026 5:19:37 PM IST
Baloch activist Sammi Deen Baloch has strongly rejected the Counter Terrorism Department's (CTD) allegations against the Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC), saying the accusations have been circulated in the media without evidence or judicial scrutiny. In her post on X, she stated that BYC is a peaceful, rights-based political movement rooted in human dignity and public mobilisation, and currently holds significant public support in Balochistan.

She said the organisation works openly and publicly, focusing on documenting enforced disappearances, organising peaceful protests, and advocating for families who have been denied arrests, charges, trials, or even confirmation about the fate of their loved ones.

Sammi said the claim that BYC functions as a platform for terrorist recruitment has been made without proof and follows a pattern where demands for accountability are reframed as threats. According to her, when victims organise, they are portrayed as suspects, which she described as suppression rather than counter-terrorism.

She argued that if any individual has committed a crime, the law already exists to arrest and prosecute them, but instead, the state has chosen to make allegations through media narratives, endangering an entire peaceful movement.

Highlighting the suffering of Baloch youth, she said they have grown up facing enforced disappearances, killings, and an uncertain future. She warned that terms such as "rehabilitation" and "internment" are not neutral, and have often been used to justify detention without charge, oversight, or consent. According to her, rebranding unlawful confinement does not make it lawful. She stressed that when a state begins labelling human rights activism as terrorism, it is no longer solving a security issue but exposing a governance failure and an inability to tolerate scrutiny or dissent.

Sammi reaffirmed that BYC will continue its peaceful and public organising, continue documenting enforced disappearances, and continue speaking for families whom the state would prefer to remain silent. She concluded by saying the real question now is not whether citizens are being criminalised, but why demanding to know the whereabouts of the disappeared has itself been turned into a crime. (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE WORLD NEWS
'Protesters learnt violence from abroad,...
Winter Storm to bring heavy snow and per...
Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed Jiu-Jitsu C...
Pakistan: 5 killed, 10 injured in suicid...
'Iran looking for peace,' says Iranian R...
'Bangladesh will not become Pakistan, Af...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
Jharkhand: Security forces recover 17 Na...
BJP corporator Akula Srivani files compl...
Bihar CM Nitish Kumar expresses grief, a...
SC seeks status from ED, CBI in Reliance...
SIT questions KTR, warns against mislead...
'Proper treatment is being provided to a...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
"It is a dire situation, there is n... 
UAE expresses solidarity with Tunis... 
Earthquake of magnitude 3.0 strikes... 
Major property damage after massive... 
"Bangladesh has plunged into an age... 
"China will eat them up": Trump sla... 
"People of Kerala know PM Modi is o... 
Twenty-two people detected with jau...