Case is related to incident at Civil Hospital where bodies were forcibly taken from the morgue

Baloch activist Dr Mahrang Baloch can be seen speaking in this undated image. — Instagram/@mahrangbaloch_
QUETTA: Dr Mahrang Baloch has been named among one hundred fifty people, including prominent leaders from the Balcoh Yakjehti Committee (BYC), going through charges encompassing various severe offences which include terrorism, incitement to rebellion, and murder.
A first statistics record (FIR), lodged at the Saryab Police Station on Saturday, additionally named Beebow Baloch, Gulzadi Satakzai, Sabiha Baloch, Sabatullah Baloch, Gulzar Dost, Riaz Gashkori, Dr Shali Baloch, and others, a few of the accused.
Charges against these individuals include violations of Sections 7 and 11W of the Anti-Terrorism Act, in addition to sixteen sections of the Pakistan Penal Code.
These costs cover terrorism, homicide, attempted homicide, incitement to violence and rebellion, growing sickness, promoting racial hatred and adverse assets.
Mahrang, at the side of 17 others, changed into arrested and is currently being held at the Quetta District Jail underneath Section 3 of the Maintenance of Public Order (MPO) Ordinance.
The case accused Mahrang and the BYC management of supporting rioters in capturing police officers, passersby, civilians, and their protesting colleagues, which resulted in the deaths of three individuals and left 15 law enforcement officials injured.
In addition, the group is being investigated for his or her alleged involvement in a frantic attack on the Civil Hospital and forcible removal of the sufferers of the Jaffer Express teach bombing. The FIR related to the Civil Hospital incident, which became lodged at the Civil Lines Police Station in
Quetta last week, states that 100 to 150 humans had stormed the scientific facility and forcibly took the bodies of attackers involved in the Jaffer Express train assault from the health facility’s mortuary upon the instigation of the BYC leadership.
The FIR states that the accused stopped a non-public ambulance.