Act of inhumanity: BYC says Balochistan's Azmat Rind tortured to death in custody, secretly buried without family consent
Human rights group Baloch Yakjehti Committee has said a man from Naseerabad district in Pakistan was allegedly tortured to death in the custody of the forces and secretly buried without family consent.
The deceased person was identified as Azmat Rind.
BYC wrote on X: "Azmat Rind, son of Ameer Bakhsh Rind and a resident of Dera Murad Jamali, was forcibly disappeared on June 5, 2025, in broad daylight near Sabzi Mandi, Naseerabad."
BYC said on July 9 that his family was informed by Pakistani military forces that he had succumbed to injuries sustained in custody.
BYC said: "Azmat was reportedly subjected to severe torture and extrajudicially killed while in illegal detention."
" In a further act of inhumanity, his body was clandestinely buried by the forces in a deserted area of Chatar, Naseerabad—denying his family the right to a proper religious and cultural burial," the group said.
The human rights group said Rind's death is emblematic of an increasingly disturbing pattern in Balochistan, where victims of enforced disappearance are later found dead in custody, often showing signs of extreme torture.
Balochistan has been witnessing a spike in violence, involving separatist movements, heavy military presence, enforced disappearances, and economic marginalisation.
The condition of Balochistan has drawn attention from various human rights organisations, journalists, and international observers.
IBNS
Senior Staff Reporter at Northeast Herald, covering news from Tripura and Northeast India.
Related Articles

What is Chhayanaut—and why Islamists set it on fire in Dhaka amid protests over Hadi's death?
The premises of Chhayanaut, a prominent Bengali cultural organisation in Bangladesh, were vandalised and set ablaze in Dhaka early Friday following the death of anti-India political leader Sharif Osman Hadi, according to media reports.

No space for such violence: Yunus govt reacts over Hindu man's killing in Bangladesh
Bangladesh’s interim government on Friday condemned the lynching of a Hindu man accused of blasphemy amid a fresh wave of violence linked to ongoing nationwide protests following the killing of a student leader.

What is Chhayanaut—and why was it set on fire in Dhaka amid protests over Hadi's death?
The premises of Chhayanaut, a prominent Bengali cultural organisation in Bangladesh, were vandalised and set ablaze in Dhaka early Friday following the death of anti-India political leader Sharif Osman Hadi, according to media reports.

Who was Osman Hadi — An anti-India influencer whose killing has triggered unrest across Bangladesh
The death of Sharif Osman Hadi has emerged as a defining moment in Bangladesh’s already volatile political transition.
Latest News

Bharti Singh and Haarsh Limbachiyaa welcome their second child

Goa's popular Curlie's pub sealed days after nightclub fire tragedy

Why India remains unaffected as Trump suspends US Green Card lottery? Find out here

What is Chhayanaut—and why Islamists set it on fire in Dhaka amid protests over Hadi's death?

