Pakistan hangs Baloch insurgents behind 1998 plane hijacking
Pakistan has hanged three Baloch insurgents, 17 years after they hijacked a passenger plane with 30 people on board, the BBC reports.
The men were executed at jails in Karachi and Hyderabad.
They hijacked a Pakistani International Airways flight in May 1998 and ordered the pilot to fly to India but the plane was diverted and stormed by troops.
Pakistan has put at least 130 people to death since lifting a moratorium on executions in December.
The men - Shabbir Rind, Shahsawar Baloch and Sabir Rind - were members of the left-wing Baloch Students' Organisation (BSO), who were demanding more resources, such as gas and electricity, for their region.
They were sentenced to be executed in October 1998 but remained on death row until a moratorium on executions was lifted after the Peshawar school massacre.
Four other men were hanged on Thursday at jails across the country. They were convicted in murder cases and were not linked to the hijackers.