34 remaining Baloch protesters finally released after negotiations

Caretaker federal government says all arrested marchers released after fulfilling legal requirements

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Web Desk
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Privatisation Minister Fawad Hasan Fawad-led negotiation committee holding talks with Baloch protesters in Islamabad in this undated photo. — APP
Privatisation Minister Fawad Hasan Fawad-led negotiation committee holding talks with Baloch protesters in Islamabad in this undated photo. — APP 

  • All detained marchers have been released now, says declaration.
  • Government released all arrested women after first round of talks.
  • Marchers in Islamabad against Baloch youth’s “extra-judicial killing”.


ISLAMABAD: The caretaker federal government on Thursday released 34 more Baloch protesters who had been arrested during a police crackdown in Islamabad last week.

A declaration stated that all detained Baloch protesters have been released on the advice of the negotiation committee constituted by Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar. It added that the arrested marchers were released after fulfilling the legal requirements.

The PM's negotiation team — headed by caretaker Privatisation Minister Fawad Hasan Fawad — held talks with the protesters. The marchers had demanded the immediate release of the arrested persons.

After the first round of talks, the government had ordered to release of all the protesting women, who were taken into custody during the police crackdown.

It is pertinent to mention here that the people were protesting against the “extra-judicial killing” of a Baloch youth by the Counter-Terrorism Department officials in Turbat earlier this month.

The long march led by Baloch women, which started on December 6, reached Islamabad on Wednesday, December 20.

When they arrived in the capital, cops launched a crackdown against the protesters and dismantled their camps set up outside the National Press Club. Most of the protesters were arrested by the police, a move that sparked anguish across the country.

Prior to the recent development, the government side defended the crackdown, declaring it a necessary measure to avoid a "catastrophe".

In a press conference last week, Fawad said the government had to take measures to avoid a “catastrophe”, adding that they had intelligence reports about it.

The police launched the crackdown after some “local people” joined the protesters and tried to disrupt the law and order situation, Fawad added. “Some people — with their faces covered — came there and started pelting stones,” the minister claimed.

He, however, admitted that those protesters who reached Islamabad from Balochistan were not involved in the violence.

During a hearing related to the release of protesters, Islamabad High Court’s Justice Miangul Hassan Aurangzeb had pointed out discriminatory treatment meted out to protesters.

The police against Baloch marchers was strongly condemned by human rights organisations, politicians, and analysts.