By Sardar Baloch
Balochistan, despite being blessed with vast natural resources, remains Pakistan’s largest yet most neglected and underdeveloped province. This expansive and strategically significant region is the historical homeland of the Baloch nation, a proud and resilient people who, for decades, have struggled to safeguard their identity, protect their land, and defend their most basic human rights.
Although its soil is rich with gold, gas, copper, coal, and other valuable minerals, the people of Balochistan continue to endure chronic poverty, deep injustice, persistent violence, and systematic oppression. Basic necessities of life remain out of reach for many. Quality education is scarce, healthcare facilities are inadequate, clean drinking water is unavailable in large areas, job opportunities are limited, and political freedoms are severely restricted. Under such conditions, the Baloch people have felt compelled, in keeping with their cultural values and historical consciousness, to continue their pursuit of a dignified existence.
For decades, the Baloch nation has lived under political marginalization and imposed silence. Most major decisions concerning Balochistan are made by Pakistan’s central government and military establishment, often without meaningful consultation or consideration of the region’s indigenous population and their legitimate concerns.
Baloch leaders who attempt to voice their people’s grievances or advocate for their rights face grave consequences. Many have been abducted, detained, or eliminated under mysterious circumstances. Repeated reports by human rights organizations indicate that Balochistan records the highest number of enforced disappearances in the country, with these cases frequently linked to the Pakistani military, intelligence agencies, and other security institutions.
In an environment where the right to speak, choose, or participate in political decision-making is systematically denied, many Baloch youth find themselves pushed toward unrest, separatist sentiment, and, in some cases, armed resistance. This is not a pursuit of power, but a struggle for survival, justice, and the preservation of their collective dignity.
Balochistan is widely regarded as one of Pakistan’s richest regions in terms of natural resources. It possesses vast reserves of gold, copper, coal, gas, and other minerals. Yet the benefits of this wealth rarely reach the people who live on this land. Instead, profits flow to the central government, military-linked enterprises, and foreign contractors. While resources worth billions are extracted each year, the Baloch people remain deprived of the prosperity that rightfully belongs to them.
This economic injustice represents a stark form of exploitation. It has not only deepened poverty but has also fostered widespread resentment toward the state, its institutions, and centralized power. International human rights organizations have consistently reported on the heavy-handed tactics employed by Pakistani security forces against activists, students, journalists, and other members of civil society who dare to speak out.
Arbitrary arrests, prolonged detentions without trial, torture, and extrajudicial killings have become part of the grim reality for many families. Those who disappear are often never seen again, and when bodies are recovered, they bear visible signs of severe abuse. Such practices constitute a grave violation of human dignity and have plunged the Baloch people into a profound psychological, political, and social crisis.
Freedom of expression in Balochistan has been drastically curtailed. Anyone, whether an activist, writer, academic, politician, or student, who speaks about political, economic, or cultural rights risks being branded a separatist or terrorist. This labeling is not incidental. It is part of a deliberate policy by Pakistan’s military regime aimed at discrediting the Baloch struggle, silencing dissent, and justifying repression both domestically and internationally. Under the pretext of counterterrorism, thousands have been arrested, tortured, and killed.
Balochistan, therefore, cannot be viewed merely as a resource-rich territory. It is the homeland of an oppressed yet steadfast people who have long endured injustice in their struggle for dignity and rights. The defense of political, economic, cultural, and human rights is neither a crime nor an act of terrorism. It is a legitimate and fundamental human right. Recognizing this truth is essential for the Baloch people in their pursuit of self-determination, the preservation of their national identity, and freedom from oppression.
At the same time, the policies and actions of Pakistan’s military regime, reflected in enforced disappearances, economic exploitation, political exclusion, and cultural suppression, must no longer be concealed or ignored. These realities need to be clearly presented before the international community, so that the world understands how an entire nation has been denied its rights and dignity under the guise of security and counterterrorism.
International human rights organizations, global media, and responsible states carry a moral responsibility in this matter. This is not merely the issue of Balochistan. It is a test of the world’s conscience. The time has come for the international community to listen to the voice of the Baloch people, support their legitimate demands, and openly condemn the injustices they continue to face. Silence, at this stage, is no longer a neutral position.

















































