Baloch Society Of North America (BSO-NA) Baloch Society Of North America (BSO-NA) is working to unite and Organize all Baloch in North America and 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.
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Pakistan's government wants to develop the resource-rich region for their own interests and has alienated the local Baloch population by its use of
military force, and there is growing evidence the fighting has had a grave impact on displaced civilians.
Bugti, who according to custom, takes the name of his tribe, said his baby boy died of cold earlier this month. Now, his one-year-old daughter is
seriously ill for lack of food, medicine and proper shelter.
"It gets extremely cold at night," Bugti said at the camp he has shared with thousands of other refugees for the past year. "We will all die without aid."
A survey by Unicef, has counted 84,000 displaced people, including 26,000 women and 33,000 children, and recommended a US$1 million (Dh3.68
million) emergency relief package. The government gave the plan the green light last week, but only after months of stalling.
The survey, conducted in August, found that 28 per cent of the children were suffering acute malnutrition and about 6 per cent could die without
immediate help. Ronald Van Dijk, a senior program officer with Unicef, said last week it was likely some of those children had since died. Unicef
plans to set up 57 feeding stations with local health workers in three districts.
http://archive.gulfnews.com/articles/06/12/30/10093053.html
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People displaced by conflict in Balochistan appeal for help
AP Published: 30/12/2006
The 22-year-old is one the neglected refugees uprooted by fighting this year between government
forces and ethnic Baloch rebels in the vast desert of Baluchistan province, the scene of
long-running unrest over political rights and royalties from rich natural gas fields.
Speaking in a fetid, sprawling camp of huts and flimsy tents in a roadside field where dozens of
barefoot and thin children scurry about in dusty lanes, Bugti said, "It seems that we have been
living in hell for the past one year."Tribal leaders say at least 76 people, mostly children, have died
in the settlements in the past three months.
Forgotten
The conflict in Balochistan, Pakistan's biggest and poorest province, is a largely forgotten one.
Western nations are more concerned over Taliban militants believed to be launching attacks from
border regions of Baluchistan into Afghanistan where Nato forces operate.



Baloch Refugees:
A survey by Unicef, has counted 84,000 displaced Baloch people, including
26,000 women and 33,000 children, and recommended
a US$1 million (Dh3.68 million) emergency relief package.
Shah Mohammad Bugti says his nine-month-old son has died and his daughter may soon follow if humanitarian aid does not reach tens of thousands of desperate tribesmen fleeing a civil conflict in Pakistan's tense southwest Balochistan
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