Press Releases
Baluch nationalist rebel leader Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti (2nd L) arrives with
armed guards and Hafiz Hussain Ahnad (2nd R), leader of
Mutahida-Majlis-Amil, to attend a meeting with visiting politicians in the
remote southwestern town of Dera Bugti in Baluchistan province in this March
22, 2005 file photograh. Authorities in the Pakistani city of Quetta imposed an
indefinite curfew and called in troops on Sunday August 27, 2006, after violent
protests followed the killing of the Baluch nationalist rebel leader. Picture
taken March 22, 2005. REUTERS/Zeeshan Haider/Files (PAKISTAN)
Baluch nationalist rebel leader Nawab Akbar Khan
Bugti (front, 2nd L) arrives with armed guards and
Hafiz Hussain Ahnad (front, 2nd R), leader of
Mutahida-Majlis-Amil, to attend a meeting with
visiting politicians in the remote southwestern town
of Dera Bugti in Baluchistan province in this March
22, 2005 file photograh. Authorities in the Pakistani
city of Quetta imposed an indefinite curfew and
called in troops on Sunday August 27, 2006, after
violent protests followed the killing of the Baluch
nationalist rebel leader. Picture taken March 22,
2005. REUTERS/Zeeshan Haider/Files (PAKISTAN)
Residents look at the burnt buses, which were set on fire by angry university
students after the killing of ethnic-Baluch tribal chief Nawab Akbar Bugti,
Sunday, Aug. 27, 2006 in Quetta, Pakistan. Police arrested 450 rioters who
rampaged through this southwestern city Sunday in defiance of a curfew to
protest the Pakistani military's overnight killing of Bugti, a top police official
said. (AP Photo/Arshad Butt)
A man reads a newspaper, with a headline about the killing of Baluch rebel
leader Akbar Bugti, in Quetta August 27, 2006. Authorities in the Pakistani city
of Quetta imposed an indefinite curfew and called in troops on Sunday after
violent protests followed the killing of a Baluch nationalist rebel leader.
REUTERS/Rizwan Saeed (PAKISTAN)
A man looks at a burnt vehicle after violent protests in Quetta August 27,
2006. Authorities in the Pakistani city of Quetta imposed an indefinite curfew
and called in troops on Sunday after violent protests followed the killing of a
Baluch nationalist rebel leader. REUTERS/Rizwan Saeed (PAKISTAN)
Pakistani soldiers patrol a street after the killing of Baluch nationalist leader
Akbar Bugti, in Quetta August 27, 2006. Authorities in the Pakistani city of
Quetta imposed an indefinite curfew and called in troops on Sunday after
violent protests followed the killing of a Baluch nationalist rebel leader.
REUTERS/Rizwan Saeed (PAKISTAN)
A man looks at a burnt government office after violent protests in Quetta August
27, 2006. Authorities in the Pakistani city of Quetta imposed an indefinite curfew
and called in troops on Sunday after violent protests followed the killing of a
Baluch nationalist rebel leader. REUTERS/Rizwan Saeed (PAKISTAN)
A Pakistani Baluch woman flashes a victory sign under a
poster of her leader Nawab Akbar Bugti at a rally in this file
photo taken March 22, 2005 in Karachi, Pakistan. Security
forces on Saturday, Aug. 26, 2006 killed anti-government
Baluch tribal leader Nawab Akbar Bugti and 24 suspected
rebel supporters, government and security officials said. At
least five security forces also died.. (AP Photo/Shakil Adil,
File)
Anti-government Baluch tribal leader Nawab Akbar Bugti, center, flanked by his
armed tribesmen leaves his residence in Dera Bugti, Pakistan, in this March 22,
2005 file photo. Security forces killed anti-government Baluch tribal leader
Nawab Akbar Bugti and 24 suspected rebel supporters, government and security
officials said late Saturday, Aug. 26, 2006. (AP Photo/Mohammad Farooq/File)
Anti-government Baluch tribal leader Nawab Akbar
Bugti talks to reporters in this March 22, 2005 file
photo at his hometown in Dera Bugti, Pakistan.
Security forces killed anti-government Baluch tribal
leader Nawab Akbar Bugti and 24 suspected rebel
supporters, government and security officials said
late Saturday, Aug. 26, 2006. (AP
Photo/Mohammad Farooq/File)
Renegade Baluch tribal leader Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti (L) presides over a meeting of his Bugti tribe at his
residence of Dera Bugti near Pakistan's key gas-field of Sui in this January 18, 2005 file photo. The
prominent rebel leader in Pakistan's gas-rich Baluchistan province has been killed in fighting with
government forces, the government said early on August 27, 2006. An Interior Ministry official said 21
members of the security forces and 37 rebels were also killed in fighting in the Bambore district of the
southwestern province. Picture taken January 18, 2005. REUTERS/Asim Tanveer/Files (PAKISTAN)
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Declaration of Human Rights
Baloch Society Of North America (BSO_NA)
Baloch Society Of North America (BSO_NA) is Non-Profit Organization, working to unite and Organize
all Baloch in North America, to expose the Occupation of our land (Balochistan)  and  exploitations of
our resources by  Pakistani and Iranian Governments, and to bring their Human Rights Violations in
Balochistan into the world’s Notice.