Associated Press
GADANI, Pakistan – Fifteen year-old Sammi Baluch has been walking for nearly a month through southern Pakistan's parched, mountainous landscape in the hope of finding her father, who disappeared four years ago after being taken by security forces.
She is part of a group of around two dozen activists making the 700-kilometer (400-mile) journey on foot from Quetta, the capital of their home province of Baluchistan, to the southern port city of Karachi in a march to protest the government's failure to determine the fate of thousands of people who have gone missing over the years as Pakistani authorities battle a separatist insurgency in Baluchistan, heartland of the country's ethnic Baluch minority.
GADANI, Pakistan – Fifteen year-old Sammi Baluch has been walking for nearly a month through southern Pakistan's parched, mountainous landscape in the hope of finding her father, who disappeared four years ago after being taken by security forces.
She is part of a group of around two dozen activists making the 700-kilometer (400-mile) journey on foot from Quetta, the capital of their home province of Baluchistan, to the southern port city of Karachi in a march to protest the government's failure to determine the fate of thousands of people who have gone missing over the years as Pakistani authorities battle a separatist insurgency in Baluchistan, heartland of the country's ethnic Baluch minority.
The government and the Supreme Court have set up commissions to investigate missing persons, but relatives of victims complain that many of the cases remain unsolved and alleged perpetrators are rarely convicted. A U.N. working group that visited Pakistan last year to investigate the issue said it had received no information related to convictions of state agents in relation to disappearances, despite repeated requests.As the activists have made their way to Karachi, residents of towns on their path have at times walked with them for a few hours, even for a full day, as a show of solidarity.
"I am marching with these women and girls because they are victimized," said Muhammad Nawaz, a young student who joined the group as it marched past his town, Gadani. "I am giving them my moral support, at least in the limits of my town."
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Associated Press writer Sebastian Abbot contributed to this report from Islamabad. http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/11/21/baluch-activists-stage-long-march-to-protest-thousands-allegedly-abducted-by/
"I am marching with these women and girls because they are victimized," said Muhammad Nawaz, a young student who joined the group as it marched past his town, Gadani. "I am giving them my moral support, at least in the limits of my town."
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Associated Press writer Sebastian Abbot contributed to this report from Islamabad. http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/11/21/baluch-activists-stage-long-march-to-protest-thousands-allegedly-abducted-by/