Quetta, Jan 15 (IANS) A female teacher was shot dead outside Allahabad Girls High School in Sibi area of Pakistan’s Balochistan on Thursday, local media reported, citing police officials.
The attack took place outside the school, where unknown assailants riding a motorbike opened fire at close range, Pakistan’s leading daily ‘The Express Tribune’ reported citing police and eyewitnesses.
Shot in the head, the teacher was taken to a local hospital where she succumbed to her injuries. The gunmen fled from the spot.
The victim, belonging to a prominent tribal family in Sibi, was married to Malik Faheem Bangulzai and was closely related to tribal leader Sardar Noor Ahmed Bangulzai, the newspaper reported.
The incident has been reported amid rising cases of enforced disappearances of Baloch women across Balochistan.
Earlier, a report claimed that Pakistani security forces have allegedly detained and forcibly disappeared another Baloch woman from Hub Chowki.
Fatima, wife of Noroz Islam and a resident of Panjgur, was taken into custody from her residence in Akram Colony and taken to an undisclosed place, The Balochistan Post reported, citing a local source. Furthermore, no official statement regarding her detention or her current whereabouts have been released so far.
Family members have said that Fatima has caused distress as previously her husband, Noroz Islam, was reportedly subjected to enforced disappearance for three times.
On January 10, a leading human rights body stated that at least 12 women, including minors and pregnant women, were forcibly disappeared by Pakistan’s security forces and intelligence agencies in 2025.
In its thematic report titled ‘Two Lives at Risk: Enforced Disappearance of a Pregnant Women in Balochistan’, the Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC) highlighted the enforced disappearance of Hani Baloch, an eight-month pregnant woman and mother of two children, along with three members of her family, from Kech district in Balochistan between 19 and 23 December 2025 through a series of coordinated actions.
According to the report, the case reflects an alarming pattern in Balochistan in which enforced disappearances, historically directed primarily against men, are increasingly being used against women, including pregnant women.
“The enforced disappearance of a pregnant woman constitutes an aggravated human rights violation, as it places both the woman and her unborn child at serious and immediate risk. It represents a violation of the rights to life, health, dignity, liberty, and legal protection,” the BYC stated.
All the four individuals remain missing until now, the report said, while the Pakistani authorities have failed to acknowledge their detention or disclose their whereabouts, legal status, or physical condition, establishing “a prima facie case of enforced disappearance and indicating a pattern of targetted, family-wide punishment”.
“The disappearance of multiple members of the same family within a short period indicates the use of collective punishment, a practice prohibited under international human rights law. Rather than pursuing individuals through lawful procedures, such practices penalise families and communities, creating fear and coercion. The resulting harm includes long-term psychological trauma, particularly for women left behind, as well as social stigma. The removal of multiple family members disrupts family structures, leaving children without caregivers and households without financial support,” the BYC stressed.
The rights body urged the United Nations human rights mechanisms, including the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances and relevant Special Procedures, to put pressure on the Government of Pakistan for the immediate release of Hani Baloch and her other family members, and request disclosure of their whereabouts, legal status, and health conditions.
It also called on the global community to hold the government of Pakistan and its security forces and intelligence agencies accountable for the enforced disappearance of Hani Baloch and her family members, with particular attention to women and pregnant women.
–IANS
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