The Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC) says three Baloch youths, including students who were previously detained or reportedly missing, have been found dead in separate incidents across Balochistan, describing the cases as part of an ongoing pattern of enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings.
In a statement, the committee said the bodies were recovered from different districts over two days, deepening fear and insecurity among local residents.
According to family members and local sources, the incidents reflect a continuing trend in which individuals allegedly taken into custody later reappear dead, a practice widely referred to by rights groups as “kill and dump.”
Details provided by the committee state that on February 15, 2026, the body of matric student Jangian Baloch s/o Abdullah Rashid was recovered from Panjgur.
Family members said Jangian Baloch had been forcibly disappeared on May 26, 2025, from the area of Parom after being taken into custody by Pakistani forces. Relatives alleged that personnel of the Frontier Corps, accompanied by state-backed armed individuals, detained him.
The family said they approached courts and relevant institutions for eight months seeking his recovery but instead received his body, which they claim bore signs of torture.
Local sources reported that more than ten similar incidents have been recorded within the past week alone.
In a separate incident on February 14, 2026, 17-year-old student, Mehnas Baloch s/o Master Zafar, was shot dead in Tump, Kech district, by unidentified armed men.
Local residents described the incident as a targeted killing. Family members stated that no criminal case had been registered against the victim, nor he faced any known allegations, adding that the killing has heightened fear in the area.
On the same day, the body of FSC student Nawab Abdullah was recovered from Washbud in Panjgur.
According to relatives, he was taken from his home on May 29, 2025, by armed personnel in front of his mother and sisters. The family said no case was registered and no court intervened during the eight months he remained missing.
They added that the body showed gunshot wounds and signs of physical abuse.
The Baloch Yakjehti Committee said the incidents indicate that enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings continue across Balochistan, calling the acts violations of fundamental human rights under international law, particularly the right to life and protection from arbitrary detention.
The group said the recurrence of such cases reflects a lack of accountability and a deepening human rights crisis.
The committee appealed to international human rights organizations, including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and the United Nations Human Rights Council, to take immediate notice of the situation in Balochistan.





























