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Tuesday, April 7, 2020
Sajid Baloch: Fears grow for Pakistani journalist missing in Sweden
Activists and journalists worldwide have criticized the Swedish government for its failure to find Sajid Baloch. The exiled journalist, who reported on Pakistan's human rights violations, had sought asylum in Sweden.
Pakistani journalists and rights groups have called on Swedish authorities to step up efforts to find missing journalist Sajid Hussain Baloch, who disappeared from the Swedish city of Uppsala on March 2.
Baloch, 39, was last seen boarding a train in Stockholm on his way to Uppsala, and Swedish police filed a case over his disappearance the following day, according to the Paris-based non-governmental organization, Reporters Without Borders (RSF).
Baloch's relatives claim that the Swedish government has not taken the disappearance serious enough and fear for Baloch's life. Wajid Baloch, the brother of the missing journalist, told DW: "The family is extremely concerned over the safety of Sajid and furious over the slow pace of the investigation. There are so many things that could help locating him."
He added, "If anything happens to our brother, then Swedish police should be ready to take the blame because we have done everything to make them realize the seriousness of the matter."
RSF said it was a possibility that the journalist, who reported on Pakistan's human rights abuses, had been abducted "at the behest of a Pakistani intelligence agency."
Baloch, who was also a masters student specializing in Iranian languages at a university in Uppsala, had been living in Stockholm due to a shortage of available rooms in Uppsala. He then found a vacant room and planned to move there on March 2 but went missing on the same day.
Pakistan's separatist insurgency
Baloch settled in Sweden in 2017 after his escape from Pakistan's Balochistan province in 2012.
Balochistan — the country's largest province by area — borders Afghanistan and Iran. The region has been dealing with various levels of insurgency and witnessed a number of terror attacks in the last 15 years.
The province has seen the presence of the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban, IS militants, and other extremist groups. Meanwhile, Baloch separatists have been fighting the Pakistani state, seeking to separate what they see as their homeland from the Islamic Republic.
Rights groups have accused the Pakistani government, including the army and intelligence agencies, of human rights violations and enforced disappearances. Thousands, including political activists, have been missing for years. Islamabad has strongly rejected the claims, accusing its archrival India of igniting separatist chaos in the province.
Crackdown on free speech
A father of two, Sajid Baloch had lived in exile in several countries before seeking asylum in Sweden. He escaped Pakistan after receiving threats related to his reporting on the separatist conflict in Balochistan.
Baloch had worked for leading English-language dailies in Pakistan, including The News and The Daily Times. He was also the editor-in-chief of the Balochistan Times, a news website covering human rights violations and drug smuggling problems in the province. The news platform is no longer accessible in Pakistan.
Asad Butt, an officer at the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan — an independent rights watch dog — feels baffled as to why Swedish authorities have been unable to trace Baloch.
"Sweden is an excellent democracy where human rights issues really matter," Butt said. "We appeal to the Swedish government to make efforts for his safe recovery besides demanding the Pakistani government to take up the matter with Stockholm because the missing journalist is also our citizen, " he said.
Calls to speed up investigation
Pakistan's Federal Union of Journalists has also demanded that the Swedish government ups its efforts to trace Baloch.
In a joint statement, president of the union Shahzada Zuilfiqar and Secretary General Nasir Zaidi said Sweden's slow investigation progress is raising concerns among Pakistan's journalist community. They urged Pakistan's Foreign Ministry to offer support in finding Baloch by cooperating with Swedish authorities.
Meanwhile, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has also called on the Swedish police to speed up its investigation.
"Swedish police should step up efforts to find Sajid Hussain Baloch … The disappearance of a journalist who focused on one of Pakistan's most sensitive issues — human rights in Balochistan — and who escaped Pakistan because of threats he received — is especially concerning," Steven Butler, CPJ's coordinator for its Asia Program, said in a statement issued on March 30.
Baloch's family and friends have set up an online campaign to help with the search.
Taj Baloch, a close friend of the missing journalist, told DW: "He was with me until the noon of March 2 and I could have never imagined that he would go missing in this country. He is a non-political guy who has a flair for languages and literature. It is difficult to understand the factors leading to his disappearance."
Pakistani courts go shamefully easy on terrorist who helped murder Jewish American journalist
As Passover approaches and Jews in America and around the world gather for the high holy days, Ruth and Judea Pearl still await justice for the brutal killing of their son in Pakistan 18 years ago.
Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was beheaded in 2002, and his killers recorded the atrocity on video. Pearl was made to “confess” that he was an American and a Jew — the so-called crimes for which his captors executed him. One of Pearl’s killers, al Qaeda leader Khalid Shaikh Mohammad, is in prison at Guantanamo Bay for this and many other terrorism-related crimes. But his associates, including British Pakistani Ahmad Omar Saeed Shaikh, had their sentences reduced by a Pakistani court last week — yet another instance reflecting Pakistan’s leniency toward jihadi extremists.
Soon after Pearl’s murder, Pakistan’s vast jihadi underground circulated the video of Mohammed beheading the young journalist as Pearl said, “My name is Daniel Pearl. My father’s Jewish, my mother’s Jewish, I am a Jew.” The video became very popular in Pakistan, reflecting the deep roots of anti-Semitism in the country.
Pearl had gone to Karachi, Pakistan, a few months after 9/11 to investigate alleged links between al Qaeda and Pakistan’s premier spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI. Mohammed pretended to be a source and lured Pearl into the trap that led to his kidnapping and murder.
But Mohammed’s own history highlights Pakistan’s failure in controlling and possibly even abetting terrorists. Mohammed, a graduate of the London School of Economics, had been arrested in India in 1994 for kidnapping an American tourist on behalf of a Pakistani terrorist group backed by the ISI. He was released in exchange for passengers on an Indian Airlines plane hijacked to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan in 1999.
Given his track record, Mohammed should have been under observation by Pakistani authorities, but successive Pakistani governments have supported terrorism against India as a means of drawing attention to Pakistan’s position in its dispute with India over Kashmir. Instead of being detained or observed in Pakistan, Mohammed continued to operate on behalf of Pakistani terrorist group Jaish-e-Muhammad, or JeM for short and maintained links with al Qaeda.
After being arrested and convicted in the Pearl kidnapping and murder, Mohammed faced a death sentence and remained defiant. But as is often the case in Pakistan with terrorists, his appeals dragged on while he enjoyed considerable comfort in prison and even managed to stay in touch with his jihadi colleagues and friends.
Last week, the High Court in Sindh province reduced his sentence to seven years imprisonment, offering Mohammed a chance for release fairly soon, given that he has been in prison for several years already.
The Pakistani government, responding to international outrage at the court decision, has announced that it will go into appeal and will not free Mohammed. But those who know how things in Pakistan really work know that the stage has likely been set for another murderer’s freedom.
The appeals process will help the Pakistan government get through threats of financial sanctions by the United Nation’s Financial Action Task Force, which periodically questions Pakistan’s failure to meet international obligations in cracking down on terrorist financing and operations in the country.
But Pakistan’s deeper problem, of state-supported religious extremism, continues to grow, notwithstanding its government’s statements and the willingness of U.S. and European diplomats to accept them at face value.
#Coronavirus cases cross 4,000 in Pakistan with death toll at 54
The Ministry of National Health Services, in its update on its website, reported that four patients died of coronavirus in the last 24 hours.The total number of coronavirus cases in Pakistan crossed 4,000 on Tuesday with more than 500 fresh infections reported, while the death toll reached 54, according to health officials.
The Ministry of National Health Services, in its update on its website, reported that four patients died of coronavirus in the last 24 hours.
The total number of infections has gone up to 4,004, while 54 have died due to COVID-19. As many as 429 have recovered while 28 were in critical condition, it said.
According to the officials, Punjab has 2,004 cases, Sindh 982, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa 500, Gilgit-Baltistan 211, Balochistan 202, Islamabad 83 and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir 18.
The country has so far tested 39,183 people, including 3,088 during the last 24 hours.
The increase in the number of new cases was reported despite hectic efforts to curtail the spread of the virus.
The government has extended the partial lockdown until April 14 and asked people to stay indoors and follow social distancing measures.
Prime Minister Imran Khan has also announced Rs 1,200 billion financial package to help vulnerable people and businesses.
Meanwhile, medical staff across Pakistan have complained for weeks over the severe shortages of safety equipment in hospitals as they treat patients suffering from the coronavirus.
Police on Monday arrested doctors and medical staff in Balochistan for protesting over the lack of protective gears.
According to President Young Doctors Association Yasir Khan, more than 150 doctors and paramedics have been arrested.
The doctors and medical staff wanted to protest outside the Chief Minister House when the police baton-charged them.
The protest came after more than a dozen doctors contracted the virus reportedly while discharging their duties.
Supreme Court Chief Justice Gulzar Ahmed on Monday criticised the government for lack of efforts to combat the coronavirus, saying “nothing is being done on ground”.