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The Fourth Schedule and the Suffering of Baloch Families — Shahab Baloch

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By Shahab Baloch

Freedom is a word that carries great meaning.

It means the right to live without fear. It means the right to travel without asking permission. It means the right to gather, to speak, to exist with dignity, and to live as a human being without being watched, restricted, or treated as a threat.

If freedom comes with conditions, then it is not freedom.

If a person cannot move freely from one city to another, then that is not freedom.

If families are afraid to attend public gatherings, afraid to speak openly, afraid that their daily lives may be interrupted by restrictions they never deserved, then the very meaning of freedom is lost.

This is the reality many Baloch families say they are forced to live with under Pakistan’s Fourth Schedule.

For many, this issue is not just about law or policy.

It is about suffering.

It is about mothers who live in fear for their children.

It is about fathers who carry the burden of helplessness.

It is about brothers and sisters whose lives become defined by restrictions they never chose.

It is about entire families living under pressure simply because they belong to the Baloch nation.

The greatest injustice is that many families insist they have committed no crime, broken no law, and harmed no one.

Yet they say they continue to face surveillance, suspicion, restrictions, blocked opportunities, and constant pressure.

How can justice exist where there is punishment without proven wrongdoing?

How can a system claim fairness when ordinary families are forced to carry the weight of accusations they deny completely?

The Fourth Schedule was introduced as a security measure.

But many Baloch families say its impact has gone far beyond monitoring.

According to accounts shared by affected people, it has become a tool that disrupts daily life in painful and deeply personal ways.

Movement becomes restricted.

Travel becomes uncertain.

Public gatherings become a source of fear.

Even ordinary social interactions can feel risky.

Imagine living in a condition where every step feels watched.

Imagine not knowing whether attending an event, meeting relatives, or traveling for work could create problems.

Imagine living with the constant fear that at any moment, your peace could be taken away.

This is not how human beings should live.

And then there is the financial suffering.

Families have described experiences of blocked accounts, frozen access to personal savings, and financial obstacles that make survival itself difficult.

Money that people worked hard to earn.

Money saved for children’s education.

Money kept aside for medical emergencies, for food, for rent, for the future.

To lose access to these resources is not just a financial setback.

It is emotional pain.

It is psychological pressure.

It is a form of suffering that reaches into every corner of family life.

A child does not understand legal schedules.

A mother does not explain policies when there is no money to provide what her family needs.

A father does not think about legal definitions when he feels powerless to protect his household.

They only feel the consequences.

And the consequences are heavy.

Many families also speak of pressure to make statements they say are false.

This is one of the most painful claims because truth is the foundation of justice.

When people feel forced to speak against their conscience, something far greater than legal rights is damaged.

Human dignity is damaged.

Trust is damaged.

The belief that justice is possible is damaged.

No nation can build peace through fear.

No system can create stability by silencing pain.

Silence does not mean peace.

Fear does not mean order.

Restriction does not mean justice.

For many Baloch families, this issue is connected to a larger struggle over identity, recognition, and what they describe as their aspiration for freedom in Balochistan.

Regardless of political differences or viewpoints, one principle should remain clear.

Families should never be made to suffer simply for who they are.

The Baloch nation deserves dignity.

Its people deserve to live without fear.

Its families deserve to sleep without anxiety, to travel without restriction, and to gather without suspicion.

Human rights are not selective.

Justice cannot belong only to some.

Freedom cannot be granted to one group while denied to another.

If freedom is real, it must be for everyone.

It cannot come with invisible chains.

It cannot come with blocked accounts.

It cannot come with restrictions on movement.

It cannot come with fear attached to every knock on the door.

A just society is measured not by the promises it makes, but by how it treats those who feel unheard.

It is measured by whether it protects the weak or burdens them.

It is measured by whether it listens to pain or silences it.

The suffering of Baloch families deserves to be acknowledged.

Their voices deserve to be heard.

Their pain deserves to be understood.

Because no family should have to prove its innocence every single day just to live a normal life.

And no people should ever have to question whether freedom, dignity, and justice apply to them too.

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of The Balochistan Post or any of its editors.

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