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Karima Baloch's death declared as due to 'non criminal' reasons [Update #68]

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I am hearing terrible news about Karima Baloch. I hope it is not true and that she is found safe.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">MISSING:<br>Karima Mehrab, 37<br>- last seen on Dec 20, in the Bay St + Queens Quay W area<br>- 5'3", 115 lbs., black long hair, brown eyes<br>- wearing black jeans, grey hooded Roots sweatshirt, black Canada Goose winter jacket, black Doc Martin boots<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/GO2394980?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#GO2394980</a><br>^ep2 <a href="https://t.co/i78dK2TLbR">pic.twitter.com/i78dK2TLbR</a></p>— Toronto Police Operations (@TPSOperations) <a href="https://twitter.com/TPSOperations/status/1341000253428928515?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 21, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Her last pinned tweet on her Twitter profile reads:
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">You took them alive, we want them alive.<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ReleaseShabirBaloch?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ReleaseShabirBaloch</a> <a href="https://t.co/5Xp2sxcVXN">pic.twitter.com/5Xp2sxcVXN</a></p>— Karima Baloch (@KarimaBaloch) <a href="https://twitter.com/KarimaBaloch/status/1312804616191586306?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 4, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Hope she is safe and sound but otherwise seems to be a dumb woman. Baloch activist for what ??
 
Prob drama like before.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GWG1pdz8CvY&list=PLekhh7hfD28RGvykwevpYXxh4gq0Nh1TC&index=85


Seems to lack basic education and understanding of International law. Loves to be on Indian tv channels who are anti Pak. Why are you worried OP?
Can you summarize the random video that you have posted? I have no time to watch it at the moment.

The more relevant and humane question is, why are you NOT worried at hearing news of a young innocent woman going missing? So, do you think someone who "lacks basic education and understanding of international law" and "loves to be on Indian TV channels" deserves to go missing? Who do you think you are?
 
Can you summarize the random video that you have posted? I have no time to watch it at the moment.

The more relevant and humane question is, why are you NOT worried at hearing news of a young innocent woman going missing? So, do you think someone who "lacks basic education and understanding of international law" and "loves to be on Indian TV channels" deserves to go missing? Who do you think you are?

Sure, she mentioned Balochistan and it's history while quickly dismissing a FACT it belongs to Pakistan under International law. So do we go back thousands of years to claim land from every nation?

The title of the video is she is alive suggesting something similar has happened before.

As far as im concerned she is a traitor to Pakistan. Why would I then care or do you also hold the same views as her and want Pakistan to be broken against Int law via terrorism?
 
Sure, she mentioned Balochistan and it's history while quickly dismissing a FACT it belongs to Pakistan under International law. So do we go back thousands of years to claim land from every nation?

The title of the video is she is alive suggesting something similar has happened before.

As far as im concerned she is a traitor to Pakistan. Why would I then care or do you also hold the same views as her and want Pakistan to be broken against Int law via terrorism?
I don't believe in separatism.
Neither do I believe in crushing the rights of poor, indigenous people and displacing them from their homes.
I don't believe in violence of any kind. The worst form of violence is when it is committed by the state.
Mutual respect, love, and dialogue is a higher path.
I hope your heart softens one day, too, oh mighty, macho King Khan.
But let's go back to the topic and hope that she gets found safe and sound.
 
I don't believe in separatism.
Neither do I believe in crushing the rights of poor, indigenous people and displacing them from their homes.
I don't believe in violence of any kind. The worst form of violence is when it is committed by the state.
Mutual respect, love, and dialogue is a higher path.
I hope your heart softens one day, too, oh mighty, macho King Khan.
But let's go back to the topic and hope that she gets found safe and sound.

This is the topic. Hundreds of Pakistani brave soldiers and thousands of civilians have been murdered by terrorists who this woman and her ilk support. Please stop pandering to her propaganda which aims to continue bloodshed in Balochistan.

Its too late for her and her friends, Pak has defeated the terrorists backed by India in this part of the country esp now Afghanistan is set to be free. Ask Yadav he will confirm this.
 
This is the topic. Hundreds of Pakistani brave soldiers and thousands of civilians have been murdered by terrorists who this woman and her ilk support. Please stop pandering to her propaganda which aims to continue bloodshed in Balochistan.

Its too late for her and her friends, Pak has defeated the terrorists backed by India in this part of the country esp now Afghanistan is set to be free. Ask Yadav he will confirm this.
Just because you throw the word "terrorist" in your argument doesn't make it more convincing you know.

If a group of your fellow citizens who happen to be desperately poor are crying for their voices to be heard and are longing for a day when they can have their own independent state, do you not think it is wise to listen to their grievances for a second?

Do you not know the history of how Bangladesh was born? Or Pakistan for that matter?

So I presume you support the birth of Pakistan, but you are against the birth of Bangladesh or an independent Balochistan? Under what logic?

If you respect yourself, you should try to be clearer and more consistent in your thinking.
 
Statehood is like marriage. Separatism is like divorce. Sometimes it becomes necessary. But like divorce, it is usually far better for everyone involved if the relationship does not reach that stage.

When divorce threatens a marriage, increasing the level of violence in the relationship does not solve the problem. It merely accelerates the inevitable.

A more rational and fruitful way out would be through conflict resolution: open dialogue, mutual respect, and the regaining of trust and love. The same is true for statehood as it is true for marriage.

The above is obviously a simple analogy, but it reflects my position on this topic reasonably well and serves my purpose. I hope I have made my position clear to you.
 
So are they gonna blame the Canadian establishment now?! This seems like a publicity stunt part of the 5th generation warfare against Pakistan to draw attention to this movement. If she really went missing who would abduct her in Canada, one of the safest countries in the world. Seems like she's working with Tarek Fatah on building her brand.
 
Also it's really pathetic that people in this thread and on that twitter thread are trying blame Pakistan lol, as if women don't go missing and get sexually assaulted in the west. Maybe she went on a date that went wrong. Should we blame every amber alert on the Pakistani state now? I guess Pakistan is also responsible for what happened to Madeline McCann and Caylee Anthony.
 
Also it's really pathetic that people in this thread and on that twitter thread are trying blame Pakistan lol, as if women don't go missing and get sexually assaulted in the west. Maybe she went on a date that went wrong. Should we blame every amber alert on the Pakistani state now? I guess Pakistan is also responsible for what happened to Madeline McCann and Caylee Anthony.
Really? Who in this thread is trying to blame the Pakistani state for her going missing in Toronto? I didn't read that anywhere here. Maybe you are confusing this thread for another forum you read somewhere else. Or maybe you are trying to insert words into other people's posts? I suggest you not to do that.

The conversation unfortunately got digressed to another topic not related to her going missing in Toronto. Perhaps that also confused you.
 
Really? Who in this thread is trying to blame the Pakistani state for her going missing in Toronto? I didn't read that anywhere here. Maybe you are confusing this thread for another forum you read somewhere else. Or maybe you are trying to insert words into other people's posts? I suggest you not to do that.

The conversation unfortunately got digressed to another topic not related to her going missing in Toronto. Perhaps that also confused you.

The twitter thread
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">MISSING WOMAN:<br>Karima Mehrab, 37<br>- she has been located<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/GO2394980?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#GO2394980</a><br>^al</p>— Toronto Police Operations (@TPSOperations) <a href="https://twitter.com/TPSOperations/status/1341137205054627844?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 21, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

She has been found. Hope she is ok.
 
Tarek Gupta claims she's dead

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Baloch activist <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/KarimaBaloch?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#KarimaBaloch</a> escaped Pakistan in 2016 to seek refuge in Canada. Her dead body was found today at Harbourfront. <br><br>My deepest condolences to her husband <a href="https://twitter.com/HammalHaidar?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@HammalHaidar</a> and the Baloch community in US-Canada and in Occupied <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Balochistan?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Balochistan</a>. <a href="https://t.co/qhaFcoISTM">https://t.co/qhaFcoISTM</a> <a href="https://t.co/dSB36YKcTQ">pic.twitter.com/dSB36YKcTQ</a></p>— Tarek Fatah (@TarekFatah) <a href="https://twitter.com/TarekFatah/status/1341144212159541253?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 21, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Now that I think about this, maybe Indian intelligence did this to draw global attention to Balochistan issue, they might be trying to pull a Kashoggi on Pakistan because it would be convenient to blame the country she was criticizing. Perhaps this is the false flag Imran Khan was warning about.
 
Now that I think about this, maybe Indian intelligence did this to draw global attention to Balochistan issue, they might be trying to pull a Kashoggi on Pakistan because it would be convenient to blame the country she was criticizing. Perhaps this is the false flag Imran Khan was warning about.

Sure thing Sherlock.
 
Tarek Fateh is the least credible source in the world, is there any sources about what happened to her?
 
Now that I think about this, maybe Indian intelligence did this to draw global attention to Balochistan issue, they might be trying to pull a Kashoggi on Pakistan because it would be convenient to blame the country she was criticizing. Perhaps this is the false flag Imran Khan was warning about.

Perhaps, perhaps, perhaps.
 
Probably ask her masters in Raw or Srivastav group. Don’t forget recently a massive money link to raw was found in Canada too, where raw spies were busy at work
 
Probably ask her masters in Raw or Srivastav group. Don’t forget recently a massive money link to raw was found in Canada too, where raw spies were busy at work

Unfortunately the poor lady was named in the EUdisinfolab report. Looks RAW decided to scapegoat their assets.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/KarimaBaloch?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#KarimaBaloch</a> was recently named in <a href="https://twitter.com/DisinfoEU?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@DisinfoEU</a> report. <br>Perhaps <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/RAW?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#RAW</a> is cleaning up the mess after their pawns being exposed.... <a href="https://twitter.com/husainhaqqani?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@husainhaqqani</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/TahaSSiddiqui?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@TahaSSiddiqui</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/GulBukhari?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@GulBukhari</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/mazdaki?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@mazdaki</a> <a href="https://t.co/uj2ux2SEqm">pic.twitter.com/uj2ux2SEqm</a></p>— Katherine (@Jinnah_Club) <a href="https://twitter.com/Jinnah_Club/status/1341256879574556672?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 22, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Her last tweet

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Kidnap, torture, murder: the plight of Pakistan’s thousands of disappeared | Global development | The Guardian <a href="https://t.co/PFPjcqGw4x">https://t.co/PFPjcqGw4x</a></p>— Karima Baloch (@KarimaBaloch) <a href="https://twitter.com/KarimaBaloch/status/1338528766969204737?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 14, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Her last tweet

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Kidnap, torture, murder: the plight of Pakistan’s thousands of disappeared | Global development | The Guardian <a href="https://t.co/PFPjcqGw4x">https://t.co/PFPjcqGw4x</a></p>— Karima Baloch (@KarimaBaloch) <a href="https://twitter.com/KarimaBaloch/status/1338528766969204737?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 14, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Of course that's the most convenient conclusion to come to. Let the RCMP investigate.
 
We all know who is behind her disappearance and it is our boys. The question to ask is whether this is a prudent strategy or not?

I am all for clamping down on Baloch secessionism with an iron fist but is this strategy of disappearing activists really in our best interests? Because whenever one of these dissident activists disappears or turns up dead the blame is automatically directed towards the ISI which hurts our international image, something that is already in a precarious position for decades.

Unless they are disappearing someone prominent like Brahamdagh Bugti or one of the Marris , I don't see the whole point in this exercise. The negatives outweigh the positives.
 
after investigation, if you find any name of ISI thn we should talk, otherwise its a Raw cleanup Op .....
 
Karima Baloch: Pakistani rights activist found dead in Toronto

The body of Karima Baloch, a Pakistani human rights activist, has been found in Toronto, Canada, where she had been living for five years in exile.

Ms Baloch, 37, a campaigner from the restive region of Balochistan in western Pakistan, was a vocal critic of the Pakistani military and state.

Toronto police issued an appeal after she went missing on Sunday and later confirmed that her body had been found.

Police said there were "not believed to be any suspicious circumstances".

In 2016, Ms Baloch was named in the BBC's annual list of 100 inspirational and influential women for her work as a campaigner. She left Pakistan in 2015, after terrorism charges were levelled against her.

She continued to campaign in exile for the rights of people in Balochistan, both on social media and in person. And the threats followed her, according to Lateef Johar Baloch, a close friend and fellow activist who also lives in Toronto.

He told the BBC that Ms Baloch had recently received anonymous threats warning someone would send her a "Christmas gift" and "teach her a lesson".

Ms Baloch's sister told the BBC Urdu service on Tuesday that her death was "not only a tragedy for the family, but also for the Baloch national movement".

"She didn't go abroad because she wanted to, but because... open activism in Pakistan had become impossible," Mahganj Baloch said.

Balochistan province has been host to a long-running separatist insurgency. Ms Baloch was a well-known activist in the region; she was the first female head of the Baloch Students' Organisation (BSO) - a banned activist group.

Her first public exposure as an activist was in 2005, in Balochistan's Turbat area, where she attended a protest over missing persons carrying the picture of one of her missing relatives.

Activists in Balochistan say thousands of campaigners have gone missing in recent years. The Pakistani military denies accusations that it's brutally suppressing the region's aspirations for autonomy.

Several members of Baloch's extended family had been linked to the Baloch resistance movement over the years, and two of her uncles - a brother of her mother and a brother of her father - had gone missing. Their dead bodies were later found.

She rose to the head of the BSO in 2006, but many of the group's activists were either "disappeared" or went into hiding in the following years, and in 2013 the government banned the group.

Baloch went into exile in 2015 after terrorism charges were filed against her. After relocating to Toronto she married a fellow activist, Hamal Baloch. She remained active in exile both on social media and in human rights activities in Canada and Europe.

Reacting to the news of Baloch's death, the Balochistan National Movement (BNM) announced a 40-day mourning period.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-55368524
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Toronto police confirm the body of Karima Baloch, 37, a prominent Pakistani rights activist, has been found. "It is currently being investigated as a non-criminal death and there are not believed to be any suspicious circumstances," says police spokesperson.</p>— Asad Hashim (@AsadHashim) <a href="https://twitter.com/AsadHashim/status/1341375377101496324?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 22, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Toronto police confirm the body of Karima Baloch, 37, a prominent Pakistani rights activist, has been found. "It is currently being investigated as a non-criminal death and there are not believed to be any suspicious circumstances," says police spokesperson.</p>— Asad Hashim (@AsadHashim) <a href="https://twitter.com/AsadHashim/status/1341375377101496324?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 22, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

There goes all conspiracies out of window.
 
Sure, she mentioned Balochistan and it's history while quickly dismissing a FACT it belongs to Pakistan under International law. So do we go back thousands of years to claim land from every nation?

The title of the video is she is alive suggesting something similar has happened before.

As far as im concerned she is a traitor to Pakistan. Why would I then care or do you also hold the same views as her and want Pakistan to be broken against Int law via terrorism?

Nothing but class, as always.
 
Prominent Pakistani rights activist, Karima Mehrab Baloch, found dead in Toronto

Police say they have found the body of a Pakistani dissident living in the Canadian city of Toronto on refugee status, with rights group Amnesty International and others calling for a full and transparent investigation into the circumstances surrounding her death.

The body of 37-year-old Karima Mehrab Baloch was found on Monday evening, although no immediate cause of death was given by police, said Lateef Johar Baloch, a rights activist.

“I am with her family [and] I was there when police came to us and confirmed that they found her body,” Lateef Baloch told Al Jazeera by telephone.

“It is confirmed that she is dead, and her body was found from water near Toronto.”

A Toronto police spokesperson confirmed the body of a 37-year-old woman had been located on Monday.

“It is currently being investigated as a non-criminal death and there are not believed to be any suspicious circumstances,” said Caroline de Kloet, a police media relations officer.

Karima had earlier been reported missing by Toronto police, having last been seen at about 3pm local time (20:00 GMT) on Sunday in the Bay Street and Queens Quay West area, according to a police statement.

Rights groups and Pakistani rights activists, particularly those living on asylum status in foreign countries, have called for a thorough investigation into her death, alleging it may have been carried out by state actors.

Karima was a prominent ethnic Baloch rights activist, having led the Baloch Student Organisation’s Azad faction (BSO-A), an organisation at the forefront of the political movement calling for the independence of Pakistan’s ethnic Baloch areas and documenting alleged human rights violations there.

Baloch activists, particularly those calling for independence, have been subject for years to a sustained and documented campaign of enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings, local and international rights groups say.

Located in Pakistan’s southwest, Balochistan is the country’s largest but least populated province and is rich in minerals and other resources.

Baloch rights groups have long decried what they term Pakistan’s extractive policy towards the region, mining it for resources but leaving it languishing at the bottom of most socioeconomic indicators in the South Asian country.


For more than a decade, armed ethnic Baloch groups have also been fighting a separatist war against Pakistani security forces, killing many Pakistani security forces and civilians in attacks they say are aimed at achieving independence.

Pakistan’s military routinely denies allegations of rights abuses, saying most of the region’s “missing people” are members of armed groups who fled their homes voluntarily.

Karima was one of the most prominent voices calling for justice for political activists who were allegedly abducted or killed by Pakistan’s intelligence services. She took over the leadership of the BSO-A after the disappearance of its previous head, Zahid Baloch, in 2014.

In 2016, the BBC named her as one of its 100 “inspirational and influential women” for that year, citing her activism.

Facing threats to her life, she fled to Canada and was granted permanent political asylum in 2017.

Pattern of violence
“Recently, her husband told me that he got some threats regarding her [in the last week],” said Lateef Baloch, who is not related to Karima but is a close friend and associate.


“People that sent messages to him saying that they will send a ‘gift’ to Karima by Christmas or something like this.”

A screenshot of those threatening messages was shared with Al Jazeera.

On Tuesday, international rights organisation Amnesty International called for a thorough investigation into the rights activist’s death.

“The death of activist Karima Baloch in Toronto, Canada is deeply shocking and must be immediately and effectively investigated,” the group said in a tweet.

“The perpetrators must be brought to justice without recourse to the death penalty.”

Karima’s is the second death of a Pakistani dissident under mysterious circumstances this year.


On March 2, Sajid Hussain, a Pakistani activist and journalist who often wrote on human rights violations in Balochistan and was living in self-imposed exile in Sweden, was reported missing.

His body was found almost two months later in a river near the Swedish town of Uppsala, authorities said.

Police did not investigate Hussain’s death as a crime, but media rights watchdog Reporters Without Borders said there was “a strong possibility that he was killed in connection with his work as a journalist”.

In February, rights activist and critic of Pakistan’s powerful military Ahmed Waqass Goraya was physically attacked outside his home in Rotterdam, where he lives in self-imposed exile.

Pakistani activists living in exile say the deaths and attacks come after a sustained increase in the number of threats they have faced in the last year.

Taha Siddiqui, a prominent Pakistani journalist known for his strident criticism of the military, fled the country in 2018 after he escaped an attempted abduction. He was granted political asylum in France later that year.

Siddiqui told Al Jazeera he had received multiple warnings from the United States and French intelligence agencies since he moved to the French capital Paris regarding threats to his life, and documented at least three incidents of what he deemed to be surveillance of his activities there.

“In Pakistan, we are seeing that there has been a growing oppression and crackdown and suppression of independent voices,” he said.

“Now that they’ve done it at home, it seems they are replicating that model and expanding this model globally.”

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/12/22/prominent-pakistani-rights-activist-found-dead-in-toronto
 
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Canadian police have rejected speculation of any "suspicious circumstances" behind the death of Pakistani rights activist Karima Baloch, who was found dead on Monday evening in Toronto.

"It [Karima Baloch's death] is currently being investigated as a non-criminal death and there are not believed to be any suspicious circumstances,” said Caroline de Kloet, a police media relations officer, according to Al-Jazeera.

The 37-year-old's body was found by police who did not provide any immediate cause of death, said another rights activist Lateef Johar Baloch.

Amnesty International South Asia had earlier called for a thorough investigation into Baloch's death.


"PAKISTAN: The death of activist #KarimaBaloch in Toronto, Canada is deeply shocking and must be immediately and effectively investigated. The perpetrators must be brought to justice without recourse to the death penalty," read its tweet.
 
Canadian Police are saying there is nothing suspicious about it, I'll take their word for it.
 
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Inna lillahi wa inna ilaihi rajioon.
Sad to hear this news.
 
The ruthlessness and callousness on this forum is deeply disturbing.

A refugee from Pakistan had gone missing in Toronto and people immediately went on a character assassination mission here as well as shamelessly spouting conspiracy theories.

She was found dead and still no signs of compassion for a refugee who originated from our country.

I wish you rather take this sad news as an opportunity for reflecting on the plight of millions of refugees around the world and to explore if there are any ways that you can help them. They live in precarious conditions, even in places like Toronto.

And I hope you will all one day let the light of compassion and love into your hearts. It will be good for your souls as well as for your friends and family who are around you.
 
Many Indians were dissapointed today. Take it on the chin, natural death. Better luck next time with your drivel.
 
The ruthlessness and callousness on this forum is deeply disturbing.

A refugee from Pakistan had gone missing in Toronto and people immediately went on a character assassination mission here as well as shamelessly spouting conspiracy theories.

She was found dead and still no signs of compassion for a refugee who originated from our country.

I wish you rather take this sad news as an opportunity for reflecting on the plight of millions of refugees around the world and to explore if there are any ways that you can help them. They live in precarious conditions, even in places like Toronto.

And I hope you will all one day let the light of compassion and love into your hearts. It will be good for your souls as well as for your friends and family who are around you.

It's sad to see a young person like that pass away in tragic circumstances. I have a lot of sympathy for Balochi people in general as they've been neglected for decades and their natural resources exploited with very little development in their region. Understandably, people on this forum who are supporters of Pakistan did not like her activities to split up Pakistan.

Unfortunately, the anonymity of internet forums emboldens people to say things they would never in real life especially when the forums are filled with males between the ages of 18 to 30.
 
Nothing but class, as always.

And you've added nothing as always.

Athiests like yourself may have extreme hatred because Pakistan is an Islamic republic(which will never change) but as Muslims we have a higher moral obligation to speak the truth.

She was anti-Pakistan supporting violence against Pakistani people and Pak army but now she's gone, I do hope God has mercy on her soul.
 
What a mess.

First of all, rip to the woman in question.

Then, evil Indian fake news network is extensive and Pakistani authorities are rightfully denouncing these hate spreading snakes on each international forum.

It is truly scary how efficiently these filthy clowns work and their ability to spread anti-Pakistani propaganda is second to none.

Maybe because that's the only thing they are good at :yk

Be very careful my Pakistani brethren, everything you read on internet, question it, use your critical thinking to analyse and don't let hate spreaders troll you :)
 
Canadian police conclude investigation, term Karima Baloch's death 'non-criminal'

Toronto Police on Tuesday evening termed the death of Baloch rights activist Karima Baloch, who went missing over the weekend before being found dead, as "non-criminal".

Karima Baloch, who hailed from Balochistan and was also known as Karima Mehrab, went missing on Sunday in Toronto’s downtown waterfront area. She was living in the Canadian city in exile for about five years.

Police said her body was found on Monday.

On Tuesday, the Toronto Police Service said it was aware of "heightened community and media interest" surrounding the investigation of Karima's death.

"Earlier today, we confirmed a 37-year-old woman was sadly located deceased on Monday, December 21, 2020.

"The circumstances have been investigated and officers have determined this to be a non-criminal death and no foul play is suspected," the police said on Twitter. It added that Karima's family had been updated on the findings.

Amid unverified reports — mostly in the Indian media — that Karima had been killed, a Toronto Police spokesperson had told Dawn.com earlier on Tuesday that authorities were "currently" investigating the death as non-criminal and that there were "not believed to be any suspicious circumstances".

Karima was a prominent student organiser who campaigned for Balochistan’s rights and later moved to Canada amid threats. She was named one of the BBC’s 100 inspirational and influential women of 2016.

According to her Twitter profile, Karima was the former chairperson of the Baloch Students Organisation - Azad and the Baloch National Front (BNF) Balochistan. She was a vocal campaigner for Baloch rights and missing persons.

Karima was critical of the Pakistani establishment and had been living in Canada since 2016, where she had been granted asylum. A close friend of hers told the BBC she was receiving threats while in Canada.

Amnesty International South Asia on Tuesday tweeted that her death was shocking and should be “effectively investigated”, while the Human Rights Council of Balochistan requested the Canadian government to look into the matter.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1597399/c...gation-term-karima-balochs-death-non-criminal
 
Canadian police conclude investigation, term Karima Baloch's death 'non-criminal'

Toronto Police on Tuesday evening termed the death of Baloch rights activist Karima Baloch, who went missing over the weekend before being found dead, as "non-criminal".

Karima Baloch, who hailed from Balochistan and was also known as Karima Mehrab, went missing on Sunday in Toronto’s downtown waterfront area. She was living in the Canadian city in exile for about five years.

Police said her body was found on Monday.

On Tuesday, the Toronto Police Service said it was aware of "heightened community and media interest" surrounding the investigation of Karima's death.

"Earlier today, we confirmed a 37-year-old woman was sadly located deceased on Monday, December 21, 2020.

"The circumstances have been investigated and officers have determined this to be a non-criminal death and no foul play is suspected," the police said on Twitter. It added that Karima's family had been updated on the findings.

Amid unverified reports — mostly in the Indian media — that Karima had been killed, a Toronto Police spokesperson had told Dawn.com earlier on Tuesday that authorities were "currently" investigating the death as non-criminal and that there were "not believed to be any suspicious circumstances".

Karima was a prominent student organiser who campaigned for Balochistan’s rights and later moved to Canada amid threats. She was named one of the BBC’s 100 inspirational and influential women of 2016.

According to her Twitter profile, Karima was the former chairperson of the Baloch Students Organisation - Azad and the Baloch National Front (BNF) Balochistan. She was a vocal campaigner for Baloch rights and missing persons.

Karima was critical of the Pakistani establishment and had been living in Canada since 2016, where she had been granted asylum. A close friend of hers told the BBC she was receiving threats while in Canada.

Amnesty International South Asia on Tuesday tweeted that her death was shocking and should be “effectively investigated”, while the Human Rights Council of Balochistan requested the Canadian government to look into the matter.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1597399/c...gation-term-karima-balochs-death-non-criminal
Taarek Gupta and all the Indian trolls on twitter are still in denial, they think this was a cover up lol. They've lost their mind.
 
Karima Baloch: Activist's family mourns a 'mountain of courage'

Karima Baloch, a Pakistani human rights activist living in exile in Canada, was found dead on Sunday. Police say they have no reason to suspect foul play, but Karima's family and supporters say her death at least warrants closer inspection. After all, she is the second prominent Pakistani dissident to drown in exile this year. The BBC spoke to her family about a woman they called "a mountain of courage".

In 2008, Karima Mehrab - known as Karima Baloch - was standing in front of a judge in a Pakistani court on charges connected to her activism. He told her he was minded to give her a more lenient sentence because she was a woman.

Karima declined.

"She said, 'If you are going to punish me, you should do that on the basis of equality - do not give me that concession because of my gender,'" her brother Sameer recalled. It was just another example of an "extraordinary" woman's dedication to her beliefs, he said.

Karima was used to clashing with the Pakistani authorities. She had been a thorn in their side ever since her early twenties, when she stood at the front of a rally for missing people in Balochistan clutching a picture of one of her missing relatives.

Back then, the authorities didn't know her name. But in the following years she rose up the ranks of activists fighting for independence for Balochistan - a resource-rich but restive province in the southwest. In 2006, Karima joined the central committee of the Baloch Student Organisation (BSO) - a group she would go on to lead.

Her family knew the dangers that came with such a role. When Karima was a child, her mother talked about the struggle, Sameer said, and they had uncles on both sides who were involved in the movement. They also knew what could happen. Pakistan's armed forces have been accused of suppressing the struggle through force, "disappearing" activists - a charge they've denied multiple times. In the coming years, a number of Karima's relatives would go missing and turn up dead.

"I was afraid something would happen to her," said Sameer, who left Pakistan in 2006 and joined his sister in Canada in 2017. "I could not forgive myself if something had happened. But that grew into pride because I saw what she did."

Read more: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-55434925
 
The ministry of external affairs pointed out on Thursday that the family of Karima Baloch, a noted Pakistani human rights activist found dead in the Canadian city of Toronto, had sought an investigation into the circumstances surrounding her death.

Karima, 37, was reported missing in Toronto’s waterfront area on December 20 and her body was found by police a day later. Local police said they have no reason to suspect foul play, but Karima’s husband Hammal Haidar and brother Sameer Mehrab pointed out she had been receiving death threats and sought an investigation.

Asked about the Baloch activist’s death during a weekly news briefing, external affairs ministry spokesperson Anurag Srivastava said: “We have also seen the reports about the death of Ms Karima Baloch, a noted Baloch activist. Our condolences to the family.

“It is not for us to comment on this matter but I understand her family has sought an investigation,” he added.

Amnesty International has described Karima’s death as “deeply shocking” and said it must be “immediately and effectively investigated” by Canadian authorities.

Karima fled Pakistan in 2016, saying she feared for her life due to threats from the army and intelligence agencies, and sought refuge in Canada, where she was later granted asylum.

She was included in BBC’s list of 100 inspirational and influential women for 2016, in which she was described as a campaigner “for independence for Balochistan from Pakistan”. The same year, she had recorded a video message on the occasion of Raksha Bandhan, in which she called Prime Minister Narendra Modi a “brother” and asked him to become the voice of the Baloch movement.

At an event held by Baloch Canadians in Toronto in 2018 to mark what they claimed to be the 70th anniversary of the illegal occupation of Balochistan by Pakistan, Karima said India had the reach to raise what she described as the “genocide” of Baloch people.

Karima’s death came about eight months after Baloch journalist Sajid Hussain Baloch, who wrote about human rights abuses in Balochistan, was found dead in Sweden. His family and friends alleged he was murdered. Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said his mysterious disappearance and death could have been organised by Pakistani intelligence agencies because of his work as a journalist.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...r-death-mea/story-aXtSU8sUq6lXl5I7CwCu5I.html
 
And you've added nothing as always.

Athiests like yourself may have extreme hatred because Pakistan is an Islamic republic(which will never change) but as Muslims we have a higher moral obligation to speak the truth.

She was anti-Pakistan supporting violence against Pakistani people and Pak army but now she's gone, I do hope God has mercy on her soul.

Yep, atheism has nothing to do with it, but continue on with your delusions of grandeur, as per.

She had a right to advocate for independence. I'm unsure if she supported violence, which would be wrong of course, but it doesn't change the fact that you think 'traitors' should be killed. I suppose you get that from scripture though, so I can't blame you. Why don't you start rounding up all the apostates and Ahmadis too?
 
Terrible news, RIP.

ok "non criminal", but what exactly happened? how did she die?
 
From what I have seen on social media and going by the statements made by the family, the police has ruled it a suicide.

So you leave your country because you fear for your life and once you’re settled in a first world country you commit suicide? 🤨

Definitely not suicide, the murder was probably made to look like it was a suicide.

She was either killed by ISI or RAW.
 
I don't think she committed suicide. I believe the ISI and Pakistan army collaborated in this.
 
So you leave your country because you fear for your life and once you’re settled in a first world country you commit suicide? 🤨

Definitely not suicide, the murder was probably made to look like it was a suicide.

She was either killed by ISI or RAW.

Or maybe she was fed up of a life of being used and betraying her country
 
Or maybe she was fed up of a life of being used and betraying her country

It’s definitely not that.

She wanted Baluchistan to be free, and her tweets were full of hate for Pakistan.

She was being funded by RAW, all the money she was receiving was going to BLA terrorists, ISI probably had enough evidence and decided to take her out. Personally, I think it’s justified IF she was funding terrorists.
 
So you leave your country because you fear for your life and once you’re settled in a first world country you commit suicide? &#55358;&#56616;

Definitely not suicide, the murder was probably made to look like it was a suicide.

She was either killed by ISI or RAW.

Depression and mental illness normally don’t follow logic. I mean this could be murder I don’t know but generally speaking you can’t rule out suicide based on superficial analysis. We normally have no idea what is going on in someone life.

Billionaires and global celebrities have committed suicide in the past. Being settled or rich does not nullify mental illness.
 
I don't think she committed suicide. I believe the ISI and Pakistan army collaborated in this.

I think RAW and india took her out as her name was released in EU disinfo lab. But then, who cares what we think? Officially Toronto police gave their verdict with the evidence they had.
 
Depression and mental illness normally don’t follow logic. I mean this could be murder I don’t know but generally speaking you can’t rule out suicide based on superficial analysis. We normally have no idea what is going on in someone life.

Billionaires and global celebrities have committed suicide in the past. Being settled or rich does not nullify mental illness.

Yeah it could be suicide but I just think there’s more to it than meets the eye. She was a target. She was probably being watched for a couple of weeks before she was followed to the park, where they drowned her.
 
That's because conspiracy theories are part of their ancient Pakistani DNA.

Funny thing is after the police said it was a natural death the Indians triumphantly were saying how Pakistanis blamed RAW and believe in conspiracies when in truth it was Indians, who at news of her death, were clamouring to blame Pakistan.
 
Canadian authorities have officially declared activist Karima Mehrab Baloch's death as 'non-criminal' in nature.

Responding to a Pakistan High Commission request seeking information on the cause of death, the Toronto Police Service said her disappearance had been reported on December 20, 2020 by a family member.

"An exhaustive search was commenced by officers which sadly resulted in the location of the deceased on December 21, 2020," it explained.

The letter said the officer in charge reported the details to the family shortly thereafter. “After a thorough investigation, officers determined that this was a non-criminal death and that no foul play was suspected.”

The cause of death assessment is expected to put to rest conspiracy theories regarding the activist's death being the result of some kind of foul play.

Copies of the medical certificate of death and a statement of death, along with the flight schedule of the body's arrival in Pakistan on January 24, 2021 [today] was also attached by the Canadian authorities.

Baloch had been living in exile in Canada for about five years.

Source GEO
 
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