During his intervention by the representative of the World Sindhi Congress, Farhan Soomro made a statement on the grave situation of the occupation of the lands of the Sindhi people by the Pakistan army and its proxies. He said that the process started at the inception of Pakistan when Si
The World Sindhi Congress (WSC), an organisation involved in Sindh rights advocacy organised a protest outside the United Nations Human Rights Council headquarters in Geneva, to highlight the atrocities of the Pakistan administration on the people of Sindh.
The General Secretary of World Sindhi Congress Lakhu Lohana participated in the Symposium on Religious Extremism and Terrorism in Africa and Asia held in Geneva.
According to the statement, the human rights activist Hidayat Lohar was tragically murdered by unidentified assailants in his hometown of Nasirabad, Sindh, Pakistan, on 16 February while on his way to the school where he worked as a teacher.
The murder of prominent Sindh activist Hidayat Lohar under questionable circumstances has now gathered international attention.
The World Sindhi Congress (WSC), an organisation involved in Sindh rights advocacy, announced it was organising a protest outside the Prime Minister's residence in
"Lohar's life was tragically cut short when he fell victim to a brutal attack by two assailants on motorcycles in his hometown of Naseerabad, Larkana, Sindh, Pakistan. He was enroute to fulfil his duties as a teacher at a local school, merely minutes away from a police station. This cowardly
The World Sindhi Congress (WSC) held the 35th International Conference on Sindh at the University of Westminster, Harrow Campus, in London, where the event fostered discussions and featured presentations, primarily focusing on the challenges faced by the Sindhi nation in Pakistan.
The World Sindhi Congress (WSC) expressed solidarity with the ongoing struggle against the Marhi Jalbani Massacre in Sindh, Pakistan by holding a protest on October 1 opposite 10 Downing Street, the residence of the UK Prime Minister.
Speaking to ANI, on the sidelines of the 54th Session of the UN Human Rights Council, two rights activists explained the pattern of terrorist attacks in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, saying they mostly happened in areas where people “do not want their government.”
World Sindhi Congress (WSC), a human rights organisation, has also called this act of law enforcers an act of “fascist and ethnic cleansing of Sindhi people.”
Hidayat Ullah Bhutto, Organiser of UK and Europe, World Sindhi Congress said in his intervention, “Although violence against Sindhi Hindus has been a dark thread in Pakistan's history, forcing approximately 80% of them to flee their ancestral homeland since the country’s inception. However,