Islamabad: Analyst Marwah Baloch has stated that Sumi Deen should search for her father not on the streets but in the terrorist hideouts up in the mountains.
Speaking on the Burraq Digital podcast, Marwah Baloch alleged that Sumi Deen exploited her father’s disappearance over 16 years by blaming the state and using the narrative to gain wealth, comfort, and public sympathy.
She questioned whether Sumi truly didn’t know her father’s whereabouts during all those years.
She urged Sumi to question those terrorists whom she allegedly supports or those who facilitate her events and gatherings.
Marwah claimed that Sumi has financial connections with such elements and suggested that if she truly wanted to know about her father, she should confront people like Dr. Allah Nazar, who, according to her, was closely associated with him.
Marwah added that Sumi’s father, like herself, was allegedly involved in betrayal of the nation, faith, and conscience.
Marwah went on to say that had Sumi sincerely wanted to find her father, she would have first asked Dr. Allah Nazar—known for his terror links—as he was reportedly the last person seen with her father.
She alleged that Sumi maintains regular contact with Dr. Nazar but avoids asking him direct questions because she knows that exposing the truth would shatter her carefully crafted image of innocence and victimhood, ultimately costing her the luxury and status she now enjoys.
Furthermore, Marwah Baloch declared that as long as she lives, she will continue to call Mahrang Baloch’s father, Ghafar Langau, a terrorist—someone she believes was neither a true Baloch nor a Pakistani.
She claimed he died guilty of the blood of innocent people and that instead of repenting for his actions, Dr. Mahrang chose to follow in his footsteps by aligning with the banned BLA group. Marwah equated Sumi Deen’s activities to those of Mahrang, stating that both share a terrorist mindset, though the Baloch people have now begun to see through their alleged hypocrisy and betrayal.
She criticized the seminar held by Sumi Deen in Karachi, calling it a farce attended by selected individuals, and warned that such tactics could not hide her alleged connections with terrorists. According to Marwah, the Baloch nation is now more aware and committed to education, progress, employment, and a better quality of life, and will no longer be used as pawns by individuals pursuing personal gain under the guise of activism.
Addressing Imaan Mazari, Marwah questioned her alignment with those who accept millions to spread anti-state propaganda.
She asked Imaan what human rights banner she claims to be holding when she might not even know who these people truly are—people whose hands are allegedly stained with the blood of innocents.
Marwah stated that the women holding photos and banners on the streets are mothers and sisters of such terrorists, seeking to protect them so they can continue their violence and receive money for their acts against the state.
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She concluded by criticizing so-called social media activists for misunderstanding or misrepresenting the true essence of human rights.