The Dangerous Trap of Extremist Sympathies: How Separatist Rhetoric Threatens Balochistan’s Future

By Hamnah Maryam
March 4, 2025
Balochistan is a land of incredible potential. It is the largest province in the country, covering nearly 44% of the total land area, and it is rich in natural resources like gas, coal, and minerals. Yet, despite this wealth, Balochistan remains the poorest region, with more than 40% of its population living below the poverty line. This economic frustration, combined with a sense of political neglect, has fueled anger among some segments of society — anger that platforms like the Balochi Yakjehti Committee (BYC) have exploited dangerously.
BYC often presents itself as a defender of Baloch rights, raising its voice on sensitive issues like missing persons, unemployment, and lack of infrastructure development. These are genuine grievances that deserve attention, but the problem starts when these platforms mix legitimate activism with dangerous separatist sympathies. In several public gatherings, BYC speakers have openly praised separatist militants, some of whom are directly responsible for violence and attacks targeting innocent civilians, infrastructure, and security forces. This blurring of lines between activism and militancy creates confusion — especially among the youth.
When you constantly tell young people that their only option is violence and that separatism is the only solution, you are not solving problems — you are creating a whole new generation vulnerable to extremism. According to a 2023 report by the Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies (PICSS), Balochistan suffered over 160 terrorist attacks in a single year, resulting in the deaths of more than 200 people, including civilians, soldiers, and even development workers. Many of these attacks were carried out by groups that BYC has, at times, indirectly justified in its speeches and statements.
The consequences of this rhetoric are disastrous for Balochistan itself. Separatist movements across the world show how these ideologies trap ordinary people in endless cycles of violence and poverty. In Sri Lanka, the Tamil Tigers’ separatist campaign dragged on for almost three decades, killing over 100,000 people and leaving the region economically shattered for years. Similarly, in Yemen, separatist calls fueled by external sympathies have not only failed to achieve independence but have plunged the region into one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.
Balochistan is already lagging behind in education, health, and employment. According to UNDP’s Pakistan National Human Development Report (NHDR), Balochistan’s literacy rate stands at just 43%, the lowest in the country. Among Baloch women, this number drops to less than 25%. When young people, already struggling for education and jobs, are told that their future lies in picking up guns instead of pens, the result is a generation lost to extremism.
This dangerous messaging is made worse by the fact that separatist leaders themselves rarely face the hardships they preach about. Many of these figures live comfortably abroad, in Europe, Canada, or the Middle East, far removed from the poverty and suffering in Baloch villages. They use the pain of ordinary people to push their own personal and political agendas, while it is poor Baloch youth who become cannon fodder in this dangerous game.
What’s equally dangerous is the double standard platforms like BYC adopt. Whenever the state takes action against militants, they loudly condemn it as oppression. But when separatist militants carry out bombings, target public servants, destroy schools, or kill laborers from other provinces, BYC either remains silent or tries to justify the violence by blaming it on state policies. This selective outrage is not activism — it is propaganda. And propaganda, especially when aimed at young minds, creates bitterness that becomes very hard to undo.
This is not to say Baloch grievances should be swept under the rug. In fact, the federal and provincial governments must do much more to ensure that Balochistan gets its fair share of development, economic opportunity, and political representation. But the path to these solutions does not go through separatism or violence. Real change comes through policy reforms, investment in education and infrastructure, better governance, and meaningful dialogue. When Baloch youth become doctors, engineers, entrepreneurs, journalists, and public servants, they will do more for their people than any separatist fighter ever could.
Globally, peaceful struggles have delivered real, lasting change. In South Africa, after decades of apartheid, the transition to democracy came through dialogue and peaceful resistance led by Nelson Mandela, not through separatist violence. In the United States, the civil rights movement led by Martin Luther King Jr. brought equality closer, not through militancy but through non-violent resistance and smart political strategy. These examples show that even the most marginalized communities can achieve justice without embracing extremism.
Balochistan today stands at a crossroads. The province is at the heart of major economic opportunities, including cross-border trade and multi-billion dollar infrastructure projects. These opportunities can create thousands of jobs for Baloch youth — but only if peace prevails. Investors, businesses, and even tourists will never come to a place branded by violence and instability. Separatist rhetoric, no matter how emotional, offers no realistic future for Balochistan.
The youth of Balochistan deserve better. They deserve schools, hospitals, modern infrastructure, and digital access — not guns, isolation, and conflict. It is time for platforms like BYC to choose their path. Will they become a responsible voice for development and rights, or will they continue to romanticize a failed separatist dream that can only bring more suffering to their own people?
Balochistan’s true strength lies in its people, culture, and natural wealth. If these are nurtured through education, opportunity, and fair governance, the province can rise. But if these are sacrificed at the altar of separatism, the result will be another generation lost to violence, poverty, and hopelessness. The people of Balochistan — especially its youth — deserve a future built on hope, opportunity, and dignity, not on the ruins of separatist fantasies.