Exposed after 16 years: Dr. Deen Muhammad hiding in terrorist camps, not missing

Exposed after 16 years: Dr. Deen Muhammad hiding in terrorist camps, not missing

KARACHI: The seminar at the Karachi Press Club titled ‘16 Years Without Dr. Deen Muhammad’ was not a cry for justice—it was a repackaged propaganda campaign against the state of enforced disappearance. But this time, the nation is wide awake.

Dr. Deen Muhammad, who was treating wounded terrorists of the banned Balochistan Liberation Front (BLF) and admitting them under fake identities to protect them from law enforcement agencies at the government-run teaching hospital in Turbat, is hiding after his real face was exposed to the law enforcement agencies.

Interestingly, the organisers of this event—long known for their divisive rhetoric—once claimed that “non-Baloch cannot speak on Balochistan.” Ironically, they have now shared the stage with Punjabi speakers and known anti-state elements, exposing the hypocrisy and political opportunism behind their cause.

This isn’t just inconsistency—it’s a blatant conspiracy.

The turnout itself was revealing. What were once massive gatherings have now dwindled to a handful of attendees. The people of Balochistan have rejected these narratives. They now see the truth: these so-called “representatives” of Balochistan are not champions of justice, but agents of hostile foreign interests to destabilise Balochistan.

Dr. Deen Muhammad is not missing

Photographic evidence and credible intelligence confirm his presence in the mountains, aligned with separatist outfits like the BLA (Baloch Liberation Army), armed and engaged in anti-state activities. If his daughter, Sammi Deen, truly wishes to find her father, she should search the hills of Balochistan, not the air-conditioned halls of Karachi.

This is not a “freedom movement”—it is a foreign-sponsored agenda against Pakistan. The majority of ‘missing’ persons later resurfaced in terrorist activities and documentaries of the BLA when they were involved in terrorist activities or military operations.

Balochistan today is moving forward. Its youth are embracing education, development, and employment opportunities. The voices of yesteryear’s blackmailers and propagandists are now falling on deaf ears.

This isn’t just about Dr. Deen Muhammad. This is about exposing a pattern—a carefully constructed web of deceit meant to malign the state and empower proxies like the BLA, often backed by external enemies. The so-called “missing persons” issue has been repeatedly weaponized for foreign agendas, while many of these individuals resurface in terrorist camps, involved in attacks on infrastructure, civilians, and security forces.

The state has consistently urged dialogue. It has offered platforms for investigation and transparency. Yet, time and again, bodies of those previously declared “missing” are recovered from militant hideouts, proving what the state has long contended—that these narratives are often smokescreens to shield terrorism and foreign influence.

This is not justice—it is hybrid warfare.

The use of seminars, media coverage, and emotional manipulation has been a key strategy in psychological and information operations led by anti-Pakistan proxies. Their aim: destabilize Balochistan, derail CPEC, and fracture national unity.

But the people are no longer blind. The mask has fallen.

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