Pakistan's Troubling Pattern: Why Mahrang Baloch Remains Detained After Acquittal

A court in Pakistan has acquitted rights activist Mahrang Baloch, stating the case against her was completely baseless. Despite this legal victory, she remains in detention on other charges that her supporters also call fabricated. Her organization, the Baloch Yakjehti Committee, condemns this as a political misuse of the legal system. They are now calling for international scrutiny to secure her release and protect her rights.

Key Points: Mahrang Baloch Detained Despite Court Acquittal in Pakistan

  • Court acquitted Baloch, calling the case fabricated and baseless
  • She remains detained on multiple other, similarly disputed charges
  • Rights body accuses Pakistan of using law as a tool of coercion
  • International bodies urged to monitor and ensure her legal rights
3 min read

Pakistan: Rights activist Mahrang Baloch remains detained despite acquittal by court

Rights activist Mahrang Baloch remains jailed in Pakistan despite a court acquittal, with her group calling the charges fabricated and politically motivated.

"The case... was found to fall short of even the minimal evidentiary threshold required to justify prosecution. - Baloch Yakjehti Committee statement"

Quetta, Dec 4

Human rights body Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC) on Thursday severely condemned the continued nine-month detention of its chief organiser, Mahrang Baloch and the other leaders, despite Pakistan's continued inability to present substantive legal proof against them.

The rights body stated that Pakistan’s Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) in Karachi acquitted the BYC chief in one case, which it said is "judicially recognised as fabricated, baseless, and unsupported by any admissible evidence.”

However, the ruling brought no relief as Mahrang Baloch, along with other BYC leaders and activists, remains in prolonged detention on multiple “fabricated” cases, turning the acquittal into a hollow gesture and sparking severe human rights concerns.

According to the BYC, the accusations of sedition and incitement of public disorder, filed in October, against Mahrang Baloch were deemed devoid of factual foundation and legally unsustainable.

“The case, registered on October 11, 2024, at the Quaidabad Police Station in Karachi’s Malir District, was found to fall short of even the minimal evidentiary threshold required to justify prosecution. The court observed that the investigative record contained no credible material linking Baloch to any offence and no evidence capable of supporting a lawful conviction under the Anti-Terrorism Act or the Pakistan Penal Code," read a statement issued by the rights body.

The BYC stated that on its written order, the court held that "there is no likelihood of the accused being involved in any offence or of her being convicted," confirming that the charges were without "probative value, lacked investigative integrity, and represented a clear misapplication of criminal law".

Highlighting the other cases against the BYC chief and its leaders that have resulted in their prolonged detention, the rights body further said, “Importantly, the remaining cases filed against Mahrang Baloch and her colleagues are likewise widely viewed as fabricated, following the same pattern of unsupported allegations and politically motivated assertions.”

The BYC emphasised that the pattern reflected a broader and deeply concerning trend in which Pakistani authorities employ legal and counterterrorism frameworks as "instruments of coercion" against human rights defenders, rather than as tools for justice and public safety.

“The reliance on bogus charges in the absence of evidence constitutes a misuse of prosecutorial discretion, undermines constitutional guarantees of due process, and threatens the foundational principles of the rule of law," the BYC stressed.

The rights body urged international human rights bodies, legal observer missions, and United Nations special procedures to monitor the situation. Continued scrutiny and engagement, it said, are essential to ensure that Mahrang Baloch, her colleagues, and other detained BYC activists are afforded their “full legal rights, protected from politically motivated prosecutions, and granted immediate relief from unjust detention”.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Very sad state of affairs. Using anti-terror laws to silence activists is a common tactic of the Pakistani establishment. We see similar patterns with minorities and dissenting voices there. Hope international pressure can secure her release. 🇮🇳
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Aman W
While I sympathize with the activist's plight, we must also be cautious. Pakistan often uses such internal issues to deflect from cross-border terrorism. Their justice system failing their own citizens is tragic, but our primary concern must remain our own security.
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Sarah B
As an expat living in Delhi, this reminds me why a strong, independent judiciary is so vital. Detention without credible evidence for 9 months is a grave injustice. The UN bodies mentioned should intervene urgently.
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Vikram M
Baloch people have faced oppression for decades. This case is just the tip of the iceberg. Pakistan talks about human rights in Kashmir but brutally suppresses voices in Balochistan. The hypocrisy is glaring. #StandWithMahrang
K
Kavya N
A court says there's no evidence, yet she's still in jail? This is straight out of a dictatorship's playbook. It makes you appreciate our democratic freedoms in India, despite our own challenges. Hope she gets justice soon.

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