Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

Pakistan Cracks Down On Baloch Leader Who Cheered Prime Minister Narendra Modi

IANS, 02 Sep, 2016 01:38 PM
    Pakistan has approached the Interpol to help secure the arrest of Baloch leader Brahamdagh Bugti after he appreciated Prime Minister Narendra Modi for his 15th August speech.
     
    Mr Bugti, who is the grandson of Nawaz Akbar Khan Bugti is currently living in Switzerland, after escaping prosecution in Pakistan. The death of Akbar Bugti in 2006 during Pakistan army operations had angered the entire Baloch community.
     
    Pakistan's Interior Ministry has started the process of acquiring identification documents of Mr Bugti in order to complete the Red Notice application requirements for Interpol.
     
    Last week police in Pakistan had slapped charges of sedition against five Baloch leaders including Mr Bugti, declaring him a wanted man.
     
     
    A Red Corner notice could force Switzerland ask Mr Bugti to leave the country where he has lived in exile. Pakistan does not have an extradition treaty with Switzerland.  
     
    According to details already submitted by Pakistan police to the interior ministry, Mr Bugti has been accused of plotting against Pakistan and running a banned organization, the Baloch Republican Party.
     
    The organization's armed wing, the Balochistan Republican Army is blamed for several strikes on the Pakistan Army and paramilitary forces operating in Balochistan.
     
     
    Mr Bugti has been living in Switzerland with his two wives, Laila Bibi and Shuli Bibi, and four children. While he had sought political asylum in 2011, the Swiss government turned down his request earlier this year citing Islamabad's objections.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    In Suspected Hate Crime, Muslim Woman In Headscarf Stabbed To Death In US

    In Suspected Hate Crime, Muslim Woman In Headscarf Stabbed To Death In US
    Nazma Khanam, a former schoolteacher, was on her way home along with her husband Shamsul Alam Khan, 75, after closing their shop and picking up some groceries when she was attacked.

    In Suspected Hate Crime, Muslim Woman In Headscarf Stabbed To Death In US

    Hillary Clinton Leads Donald Trump By 7 Points In One Poll, Trails In Another

    Hillary Clinton Leads Donald Trump By 7 Points In One Poll, Trails In Another
    A Suffolk University/USA Today poll of voters likely to cast ballots in the November presidential election, put Clinton 7 points above Trump nationwide.

    Hillary Clinton Leads Donald Trump By 7 Points In One Poll, Trails In Another

    Trudeau To Visit Alibaba For Launch Of Online Hub In China For Canadian Firms

    Trudeau To Visit Alibaba For Launch Of Online Hub In China For Canadian Firms
    SHANGHAI — Canadian merchants are expected to soon have their own online storefront to sell their goods to the vast Chinese marketplace via the e-commerce giant Alibaba.

    Trudeau To Visit Alibaba For Launch Of Online Hub In China For Canadian Firms

    Overwhelming Majority Of Britons Favour Banning Burqa

    Overwhelming Majority Of Britons Favour Banning Burqa
    Britons favour banning of the Islamic veil or burqa by an overwhelming majority of more than two-to-one, a recent UK poll, commissioned in the aftermath of banning of burkini swimwear on a number of French beaches, has found.

    Overwhelming Majority Of Britons Favour Banning Burqa

    US Airliner Puts 5-Year-Old On Wrong Plane, Lands In Boston

    US Airliner Puts 5-Year-Old On Wrong Plane, Lands In Boston
    Mother of a 5-year-old boy in New York has said her son was put on a wrong flight by JetBlue when he was traveling alone from the Dominican Republic and that she was presented with a wrong child by the US airliner.

    US Airliner Puts 5-Year-Old On Wrong Plane, Lands In Boston

    Canada's Move To Control Fentanyl Chemicals Not Enough To Stem Crisis: Expert

    Canada's Move To Control Fentanyl Chemicals Not Enough To Stem Crisis: Expert
    VANCOUVER — Canada's plans to restrict six chemicals used to make fentanyl will only increase demands for a more dangerous replacement if other steps to stem a national opioid crisis are not taken, a drug-policy expert says. 

    Canada's Move To Control Fentanyl Chemicals Not Enough To Stem Crisis: Expert

    PrevNext