BNM’s real audience Is India—not the Baloch people

BNM’s real audience Is India—not the Baloch people

ISLAMABAD: The Baloch National Movement (BNM), operating from the safety of the UK and Europe with no real presence on the ground in Balochistan, has begun circulating propaganda in Hindi—ironically, the language of the very state they claim to oppose.

The shift clearly exposes their true target audience: India, not the Baloch people.

The recent BYC-led protest, allegedly about enforced disappearances, raised eyebrows for its glaring lack of actual victims.

Every placard displayed the faces of BYC leaders, not one missing person. This wasn’t a protest—it was a choreographed PR campaign, exploiting genuine suffering to fuel “Fitna al-Hindustan,” terrorism, and disorder under the façade of human rights advocacy.

Meanwhile, Indian-sponsored theatrics in Balochistan have reached new extremes, now parading women and children as the face of so-called resistance. These dramatized street scenes resemble poorly-scripted soap operas, glorifying suicide bombers like Shari Baloch, and turning terrorism into spectacle—all in a bid to undermine peace and mislead global opinion.

Meanwhile

It has been revealed that the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) has been deceiving its Indian sponsors by fabricating operations and making false claims of success to extract funds. A few months ago, the incident involving the hijacking of the Jaffar Express came to light, with clear evidence of Indian backing emerging afterward.

The BLA labeled the staged attack as “Operation Dera Bolan” and shared a 34-minute video of the event with their Indian handlers. However, the footage resembled a poorly scripted Tamil movie more than a real militant operation. The video showed empty train carriages, no visible injuries or bodies, and yet claimed 125 fatalities.

ALSO READ: Fake ‘Balochistan Army’ account exposed as Indian propaganda

The poor planning and unrealistic portrayal reportedly angered their Indian sponsors, as the act appeared more like a desperate attempt to stay relevant than a genuine operation.

 

Scroll to Top