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Iran Massacres Baloch Citizens in Sistan Balochistan Province and then Blames Pakistan for Killing Them

Areesh

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Mohammad Hadi Marashi, deputy governor of the Sistan and Baluchestan province, told Iranian state TV on Tuesday that the outrage at the governors’ office stemmed from the shooting of several fuel smugglers on the Pakistani side of the border near Saravan the day before.

Marashi pointed a finger at Pakistan, saying its forces had opened fire on a gathering of fuel smugglers that had been trying to cross back into Iran, killing one and wounding four.

 
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I doubt Pakistani govt has any interest in smugglers death ....

Apparently Pakistani government has protested to Iranian embassy for lying and blaming Pakistan for this massacre

Pakistan raises ‘factually incorrect’ Iranian allegations of oil smuggler shooting with embassy

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani foreign office on Friday said it had taken up with the Iranian embassy in Islamabad a statement by an Iranian official accusing Pakistani security forces of shooting at oil smugglers earlier this week and said the allegation was “factually incorrect.”

 
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Fatal shooting on civilians are not acceptable in any sense. It doesn't matter if they were smugglers or not. Pakistan government must confront the Iranians at least with verbal condemnation.
 
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Pakistan raises ‘factually incorrect’ Iranian allegations of oil smuggler shooting with embassy

Updated 27 February 2021
SAIMA SHABBIR
February 26, 202117:35


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Pakistani soldiers wearing facemasks patrol near the closed Pakistan-Iran border in Taftan on February 25, 2020. (AFP/File)

  • Deputy governor of Sistan-Baluchistan province accused Pakistani forces of firing at gathering of fuel smugglers near the border
  • Human Rights Watch blames the incident on Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, urges Tehran to conduct a transparent inquiry
ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani foreign office on Friday said it had taken up with the Iranian embassy in Islamabad a statement by an Iranian official accusing Pakistani security forces of shooting at oil smugglers earlier this week and said the allegation was “factually incorrect.”
According to Human Rights Watch, the incident took place on Monday near the Iranian town of Saravan, killing 10 people and injuring five.

Following the development, Iran’s deputy governor of Sistan-Baluchistan province, Mohammad Hadi Marashi, accused Pakistani forces of opening fire at a gathering of fuel smugglers near the border who, he claimed, were trying to cross back into Iran.
“We are aware of the statement, which is factually incorrect,” foreign office spokesperson Zahid Hafeez Chaudhri told media during a press briefing in Islamabad.

“We have taken up the matter with the Iranian embassy [in Islamabad] about the statement made by the deputy governor of Sistan-Baluchistan province of Iran.”

“The incident occurred on the Iranian side of the border,” he said.

Pakistan has set aside nearly $20 million to fence its 900-kilometer border with Iran, frequently used for trade and by minority Shia Muslims who travel from Pakistan to Iran for religious pilgrimages. But the border is also the entry point for cross-border militancy and for an illegal fuel trade that authorities have struggled to crackdown on for decades.

“Such unfortunate incidents validate the need to have more formal ways to increase trading opportunities for local people,” the foreign office spokesperson said, adding that Pakistan viewed its border with Iran as a model for peace and security.
“We remain engaged with Iranian officials to discuss ways and means of facilitating cross-border commerce for local people living on both sides of the border and ensure the security of our common frontier,” he said.

According to AFP, Iran was also prodded by Human Rights Watch on Friday to investigate excessive use of force by Revolutionary Guards against smugglers attempting to transport fuel to Pakistan.

Quoting Baluch activists, the rights group claimed that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps had blocked a road used to transport fuel before apparently opening fire at people attempting to reopen the route.

The action prompted attacks by angry protesters on government buildings in both Saravan and the Sistan-Baluchistan provincial capital Zahedan.

“The Iranian authorities should urgently conduct a transparent and impartial investigation into the shootings at the Saravan border,” said HRW Iran researcher Tara Sepehri Far. “The authorities should hold those responsible for wrongdoing to account, appropriately compensate victims and ensure that border guards are taking the utmost precautions to respect the right to life and other human rights.”

The rights group noted the lack of employment opportunities in the province, saying it left its ethnic Baluch population with few alternatives but to indulge in illegal trade with their fellow Balochs across the border.

“Similar to the western provinces of Western Azerbaijan and Kurdistan [on the border with Iraq], its lack of economic opportunities has led many residents to engage in unlawful cross-border commerce with Pakistan,” said the New York-based watchdog.

 
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@The Eagle Could the thread on the border shooting incident be reopened, i've been waiting days and given multiple sources for the info on it and it still remains closed.
 
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Thank You Pakistan for raising awareness on plight of Balochis in Iran.
 
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Pakistan will realize that iranians are actually same or worse than indians. They are dumb and arrogant and lack respect for other nations. Their regime is an extremely bigoted one which lies all the time. Iran should be looked at, as an indian ally. There are Pakistanis who are more loyal to iran and they jump day and night for iran and want Pakistan to be iranian ally, these are the dumb idiots who want to drown Pakistan.
Imagine an arab country doing this, those certain people would have been on diarrhea rampage.
 
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Iran thinks that its a superpower. Its been around India too long

Their pride stems from the "Aryan" syndrome, which afflicts millions across India, Persia, Afghanistan, and Europe. Persians are some of the most haughty people you'll meet, carrying themselves extremely magnanimously with an aura of superiority. It's a product of the culture, an emphasis on history and being a relatively monolithic entity.
 
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Their pride stems from the "Aryan" syndrome, which afflicts millions across India, Persia, Afghanistan, and Europe. Persians are some of the most haughty people you'll meet, carrying themselves extremely magnanimously with an aura of superiority. It's a product of the culture, an emphasis on history and being a relatively monolithic entity.

And one can only imagine what they think of Baloch.
 
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