Re-silencing Balochistan? | TQ Voices

This statement has been issued by concerned faculty, staff, and students at the Lahore University of Management Sciences, after they were forced to cancel an academic panel on the ongoing situation in Balochistan. After repeated attempts to send this press release to relevant editors and journalists–for inexplicable reasons, the press release has “not gone through on e-mail to those it was sent to according to those who have issued the press release–Tanqeed reproduces it here in full.

Today, a roundtable on “Unsilencing Balochistan” to be held on Thursday 9 April at LUMS was cancelled due to state intervention.

The event was an academic event, gathering academics and activists involved in, or concerned by the situation in Balochistan. The guests were I. A. Rehman, director, HRCP; Aasim Sajjad, Professor, Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad; Sajjad Changezi, Activist; Mohammed Ali Talpur, Columnist; Mama Qadeer, President VMBP; Farzana Majeed, General Secretary, VMBP.

Such cancellation is a gross violation of freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, freedom of information, academic freedom and political pluralism.

Pakistan is a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which guarantees these fundamental freedoms and rights. These rights are also guaranteed by the Constitution of Pakistan, notably in its articles 16, 17, 19 and 19a.

We, as students, staff and faculty at LUMS, are most concerned about this cancellation, and the gross lack of democratic freedom and political pluralism that it manifests. It is all the more unacceptable that Balochistan has witnessed important human rights violations for the past decades, notably enforced disappearance of citizens. Persecution of religious minorities has also become commonplace in Balochistan, which has led to migration by non-Muslims and minority Muslim sects in large numbers to other regions of the country as well as abroad. The targeting of Shia Hazaras of Balochistan is one of the most violent and persistent persecution of any community.

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan notes that in spite of the large amount of financial and natural resources of the province, no serious and sustained  attempt to delivery the benefits of that to the people of Balochistan has been made.

Human Rights Watch states that the failure to address disappearances and other human rights violations in Balochistan “remains one of the key factors contributing to the persistent cycle of abuse and impunity in the region, which takes a heavy toll on the Baloch community. It not only affects the victims whose lives are brutalized and lost, but also their families who live in the anguish that they may never learn the fate of their loved ones. It also deeply undermines the efforts of the Pakistani government to win the trust of the Baloch people and achieve reconciliation in the province.”

In short, a serious, informed, academic debate on Balochistan is not only important, it is urgently needed to address the issues that adversely affect the state of Pakistan today. After the Peshawar attack in December 2014, the government vowed to put Pakistan back on the track of the rule of law and the respect for human rights. Informed debate on the human rights issues affecting Pakistan is a precondition thereof. Sadly, today, the State did not allow this to happen.

Concerned Faculty, Students and Staff at LUMS.

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16 Responses to Re-silencing Balochistan? | TQ Voices

  1. Taj Baloch on Apr 2015 at 6:15 PM

    How LUMS faculty agreed to cancel the event at a single galnce?
    If LUMS was committed to their own concious, then it was time for them to stand up, not to back off.
    Problem is, they listened to ISI very soon.
    Thats what we Baloch think. But we still wait for the next step LUMS would take, if any.

    Ofcorse, we Love Tanqeed & its team for standing with Truth.

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