Hey, this is Sham Jaff, your very own news curator. Since 2014, I email a bunch of strangers once a week, curating news headlines from Asia, Africa and the Americas. I work under the assumption that, here in the West (I live in Berlin, Germany), we don't read or know much about the global majority, aka the rest of the world. My goal is to help you burst your Western-centric bubble.
Issue #419: This issue focuses on human rights in Balochistan, and the latest IOM report that confirms what many journalists had been saying all along: 2024 was the deadliest year for migrants ever.
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🔍 Estimated reading time: 10 min 🔍
You have access to all of my sources by clicking on what's underlined.
Big shout-out to Wikimedia Commons for the helpful maps.
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One of Pakistan's most prominent human rights activists has been arrested
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What happened
(Dr.) Mahrang Baloch, one of Pakistan’s most well-known human rights activists, was arrested on March 22 in Quetta, along with 17 other protesters. They were part of a protest organized by the Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC) — a grassroots group that fights for Baloch rights and speaks out against enforced disappearances.
Why this matters: This isn’t just about one protest or one arrest. It’s the latest episode in a decades-long tug-of-war between the Pakistani state and the Baloch people — a marginalized ethnic group in a resource-rich province that’s still somehow the poorest in the country. And Mahrang isn’t some fringe voice. She’s become the face of peaceful Baloch resistance, and the fact that the state arrested her? Not a great look. Human rights groups, both local and international, are now saying: this isn’t just a crackdown — it’s a pattern.
So, what led to the protest?
It depends on who you ask. The official version: The Balochistan government claims BYC was protesting in support of militants killed in a train hijacking earlier this month. They say the police were just “managing the crowd.” Activists — and outlets like the BBC — say something very different: The protest began after 13 unidentified bodies were buried in Quetta without without notifying families or confirming who they were. Many feared they were forcibly disappeared Baloch men — something that’s sadly routine in the region. Authorities insisted the bodies were militants. But there's no independent proof, and the protesters were asking for the bodies to be identified and returned.
Things escalated. Fast. Three protesters were killed, over a dozen injured. BYC says police opened fire, then came back at 5:30 a.m. with a pre-dawn raid: batons, tear gas, water cannons — the whole riot gear starter pack. They also say the bodies were seized before funeral prayers could happen. The government says protesters attacked a hospital and were armed. Both sides are pointing fingers––classic he said/she said, only one side brought tear gas.
What happened next?
Mahrang was like, “Cool. Let’s shut the whole place down.” She called for a province-wide strike, and Balochistan listened. Cities like Turbat, Gwadar, Mastung, Khuzdar, Dalbandin––all shut. Roads were blocked, tyres were burned, and protests popped up across the province. And while all this was happening, internet and mobile services in Quetta mysteriously went offline — no official reason. Oh, and just to really hammer it home: Mahrang and the rest were charged with terrorism, sedition, and murder.
Who actually is Mahrang Baloch?
Mahrang’s activism began when she was 16, after her father Abdul Gaffar Langove went missing in an alleged enforced disappearance. He was a well-known Baloch nationalist who once worked for the Pakistani government, but later left to focus on advocating for Baloch rights and safety. In early 2009, he disappeared, and his body was found three years later.
She now is one of the leaders of BYC, which campaigns for justice and visibility for Baloch people. In 2024, TIME named her one of its “TIME100 Next” rising leaders, but Pakistan blocked her from traveling to the U.S. to attend the event. She’s since become a symbol of peaceful resistance — especially in a region where protests are increasingly led by Baloch women in the absence of their missing brothers, fathers, and sons.
How are people reacting?
- UN Special Rapporteur Mary Lawlor said she was “very concerned” about Mahrang’s arrest.
- The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) condemned the use of force and wants all the protesters released — like, now.
- The Balochistan Bar Council boycotted courts in protest.
- Akhtar Mengal, head of Balochistan’s moderate nationalist party (BNP-M), said she was arrested for “speaking the truth.”
- Even PTI, the main opposition party, called the crackdown “brutal” — and they’ve never been super into Baloch issues.
- South Asia scholar Michael Kugelman warned the government that arresting a woman with this much global attention? Big mistake. It’s just going to amplify the cause.
Quick history lesson: What is the Baloch struggle about?
The Baloch are an ethnic group who mostly live in Balochistan, a large region that stretches across Pakistan, Iran, and Afghanistan. In Pakistan, they live in a province also called Balochistan — a region annexed by Pakistan in 1948, months after independence.
Balochistan makes up 44% of Pakistan’s land but only 6–7% of its population (about 15 million people). It’s rich in natural resources — copper, gold, coal, gas — but it’s also the poorest province in the country.
Many Baloch feel the federal government profits off their resources, while locals get little in return — not in infrastructure, jobs, or political power. Some groups demand more autonomy, others push for full independence.
Good to know: Who is the BLA?
The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) is a militant separatist group fighting for Balochistan’s independence. Pakistan, the UK, and the US all call them a terrorist organization.
The BLA has carried out bombings, assassinations, and just two weeks ago, on March 11, the group has hijacked a train in southwestern Pakistan (the one I mentioned earlier), holding 400 passengers hostage for 36 hours. The standoff ended with dozens killed, including civilians and militants.
The BLA also targets Chinese workers and infrastructure, especially anything tied to CPEC — a US$62 billion China-backed megaproject building roads, ports, and pipelines through Balochistan. They see it as modern-style colonial exploitation, with China and the Pakistani state profiting off Baloch land while locals are excluded.
How has Pakistan responded?
The state has responded to Baloch militancy — and even peaceful protest — with military crackdowns, surveillance, and enforced disappearances. People, often young activists, are picked up by security forces and vanish without trial. Families go years without answers. Activists say thousands have been disappeared in the last two decades.
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2024 was the deadliest year on record for migrants
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What happened
At least 8,938 people died while trying to migrate in 2024 — making it the deadliest year since the International Organization for Migration (IOM) started tracking this data over a decade ago. That’s even more than 2023’s record of 8,747 deaths.
Why this matters: This isn’t just a humanitarian crisis — it’s a policy failure. Migrants are taking deadly routes because safer, legal options are out of reach. Plus, the actual number is probably way higher.
Tell me more
The deadliest regions included:
- Asia: 2,778 deaths
- Africa: 2,242 deaths
- Mediterranean Sea: 2,452 deaths
- Caribbean: 341 deaths (a record high)
- Darién Gap (Central America): 174 deaths (another record)
(I'm paraphrasing) “It’s heartbreaking and shouldn’t be happening. These rising numbers aren’t just statistics — every single one is a person, and their death affects families and communities. The fact that so many people are dying in different parts of the world shows we need a global plan to stop this from getting worse,” said Ugochi Daniels from the International Organization for Migration.
What now?
The Missing Migrants Project is releasing a detailed report soon. I'll stay tuned for you.
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The rest of this week's issue: Turkey's Erdogan and Israel's Netanyahu are sacking their political and legal enemies, an Indonesian TikToker was jailed for telling Jesus to get a haircut, Sudan's army is gaining some ground in the capital (we're almost back to square one), how not to report on Eastern Congo, why "White Lotus" is orientalist, Vietnam's hottest province, and real-life Ratatouille in Japan. And so much more.
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Hey, I'm Sham, the person behind this newsletter. Since 2014, I email a bunch of strangers once a week, curating news headlines from Asia, Africa and the Americas. I work under the assumption that, here in the West (I live in Berlin, Germany), we don't read or know much about the global majority, aka the rest of the world.
My goal is to help you burst your Western-centric bubble.
If you want to know more about me, visit my website or follow me on Twitter, BlueSky or Instagram.
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