Militants in the restive, but resource-rich, province handed over their weapons to officials at a ceremony held in the provincial capital Quetta.
Local media footages showed that the rebels came forward one by one and surrendered their weapons as children offered them national flags during a ceremony to mark the Independence Day.
Southern Command chief Lt Gen Nasir Khan Janjua said the militants had surrendered not before the authorities but before a new thinking for a better future.
Balochistan government has announced a reconciliation policy to facilitate the return of militants to democratic process, pave way for solutions to thorny issues, and exercise a greater control over the resources of the province which has been under the grip of violence for more than a decade now.
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In June, Balochistan government extended a general amnesty to militants who lay down their arms and renounce violence.
Balochistan, Pakistan's largest province which borders Iran and Afghanistan, is rife with sectarian and Islamist violence.
Home Minister Balochistan Mir Sarfaraz Bugti, Provincial Minister for Irrigation Nawab Jangayz Marri, Deputy Speaker Abdul Qudoos Bizenjo and senior military and civilian officers were among those who attended the ceremony today.