'No more forced disappearances after Feb 1,' CM Bugti vows

Balochistan CM says issue 'buried forever', ending all allegations of enforced disappearances

Balochistan Chief Minister Mir Sarfraz Bugti chairs the 22nd meeting of the provincial cabinet at the Chief Minister Secretariat, Quetta. SCREENGRAB

Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti asserted on Tuesday that there would be no further enforced disappearances by the state or government after February 1.

The chief minister made the remarks while presiding over the 22nd meeting of the provincial cabinet at the Chief Minister Secretariat in Quetta. The session took up several key administrative, legal, social, educational, and developmental matters, including the issue of missing persons.

The issue of missing persons has become one of the most sensitive and complex human rights challenges in Pakistan, particularly in Balochistan. For many, it represents not only a legal and political crisis, but also a deeply personal one. 

Unraveling the Missing Persons Crisis: Realities, Misconceptions, and the Path to Resolution

Urging the need for a permanent solution, CM Bugti alleged some elements and parties had "politicised" the matter as a “systematic propaganda tool” against Pakistan, but no serious effort had been made to resolve it legally.

He explained that security forces carried out intelligence-based operations in “gray zones” and suspects were taken into custody. However, he emphasised that “the issue of missing persons will end after February 1 and a legal framework will be in place in this regard.”

The chief minister added: “We have buried this issue forever, which will put an end to the allegations of enforced disappearances against the state of Pakistan and the negative propaganda on this basis."

However, he clarified that the state would not be responsible for any individual who went into hiding or was abducted by a terrorist organisation. 

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