Azaranica is a non-biased news aggregator on Hazaras. The main aim is to promote understanding and respect for cultural identities by highlighting the realities they face on daily basis...Hazaras have been the victim of active persecution and discrimination and one of the reasons among many has been the lack of information, awareness, and disinformation.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Afghans give lantern to US as gift to protest lack of electricity




Civil activists in Afghanistan’s central province of Bamiyan have given a lantern as a symbolic gift to the US embassy in the capital Kabul to protest against lack of electricity in the province, Press TV reports.


The activists held a silent protest in front of the Afghan parliament on Tuesday to attract attention to the fact that they have not benefited from billions of dollars in aid from international community and that they are still without electricity.

“The US has failed to keep its promises. Over ten years on [since the US invasion of Afghanistan], we still don’t have electricity. By presenting this lantern as a gift to Obama, we want to raise our voice,” Hosaini Madani, a civil activist, toldPress TV.

The activists took the lantern to capital Kabul and gave it to Afghan parliamentarians and asked them to hand it over to the US embassy.

They also condemned the indifference of their government and of the international community to the plight of the people in the central province.

This is not the first time that the Bamiyan residents raise their voice against discriminative policies of the international community and Afghan government by such symbolic peaceful demonstrations.

In 2010, they paved the roads in Bamiyan with mud to protest against government’s indifference towards roads in the central province.

They also gave medals and certificates to their donkeys that help them bring potable water from the fountains. Through the certificates they appreciated the donkeys for their honest service.

In 2011, Bamiyan residents built a huge lantern and set it up in the city’s central intersection to protest lack of electricity. The junction was later called “Lantern Intersection.”

Such measures by the residents of Bamiyan have given them high reputation in staging peaceful and calm civil protests.

When Obama took office in 2009, he pledged to tackle social problems and improve public welfare for the Afghans. However, after more than three years of his presidency, most of the Afghans do not have access to basic living requirements such as electricity, safe drinking water and health services.

MN//MA

Afghan Asylum-Seekers Found Near Bali Coast

Kate Lamb | Jakarta

Australian refugee groups have made contact with some 60 asylum-seekers adrift in waters off Bali after concerns their vessel had capsized. While authorities now hope to rescue the group, the refugees, including ethnic Hazaras from Afghanistan, now face detention in Indonesia.

After a distress call was made Thursday evening and all contact with the vessel was lost, authorities reported no sign of the boat Friday morning.

The boat was last reported off Sumbawa, a small island east of Bali. Sixty asylum seekers, including children, are thought to be on board.

Ian Rintoul of the Australian Refugee Action Coalition says hopes of finding survivors were dim until the group received a surprise phone call Friday afternoon.

“No, no, the boat hasn’t gone down," insisted Rintoul, "we just got a call about 10 minutes ago, we got a call from the boat. It's still floating, it is still adrift. I’d given up because we hadn’t heard anything from 2 o’clock, but it was from the same number and the same people… The engine has definitely failed, they are still needing assistance.”

While contact has been established, authorities are searching by land and sea to identify the exact location of the boat.

Thousands of refugees, mostly from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran, make the perilous journey through Indonesian waters ever year in the hope they will be granted asylum in Australia.

Indonesia is not a signatory to the U.N. refugee convention and often jails and deports asylum seekers awaiting refugee status.

The Australian government has drawn criticism in recent years for urging Indonesian authorities to pick up asylum seekers so they are processed in Indonesia, rather than Australia.

Ian Rintoul says the refugee coalition is still waiting to see what happens with this latest boat.

“If they are rescued by Indonesian authorities that may well be placed in detention in Indonesia and that is one of our concerns about the whole situation in Indonesia and the pressure from the Australian government pushing people to get on boats that aren’t as well prepared as they could be,” Rintoul said.

Last Sunday a Singapore-registered tanker rescued around 120 Australia-bound asylum seekers, mostly Afghans and some Iranians, from their sinking wooden boat.

They refused to get off the docked tanker for two days, saying they wanted to continue to Australia where their rights are more protected.

In December, a boat carrying around 250 mostly Afghan and Iranian asylum seekers sank in Indonesian waters on its way to Christmas Island. Only 47 survived.

تظاهرات گسترده هزاره‌ها در کویته پاکستان



به روز شده:  16:08 گرينويچ - جمعه 13 آوريل 2012 - 25 فروردین 
هزاره‌های پاکستان می گویند قتل‌های هدفمند گروه های مسلح، آنهارا به ستوه آورده است
هزاران نفر از شهروندان کویته مرکز ایالت بلوچستان پاکستان، در اعتراض به آنچه قتلهای هدفمند هزاره‌ها در این ایالت می خوانند، تظاهرات کردند.
این دومین روزی است که مرکز ایالت بلوچستان پاکستان شاهد تظاهرات گسترده هزاره ها است.

مراکز تجاری تعطیل است و هزاران نفر که به دعوت "حزب دموکراتیک هزاره ها" به خیابانها ریخته اند، می گویند اگر دولت به خواست آنها پاسخ مثبت ندهد، به این اعتراض ادامه خواهند داد.خبرنگاران می گویند تظاهرات دو روز گذشته، شهر کویته مرکز ایالت بلوچستان پاکستان را عملا فلج کرده است.
رهبران حزب دموکراتیک هزاره‌ها در بلوچستان پاکستان می گویند از سال گذشته میلادی تا کنون، بیش از ۱۵۰ تن از هزاره‌های پاکستان کشته شده اند.
قربانیان این حملات غیر نظامی اند، آنها در راه سفر به ایران در پاکستان، در هنگام عبور و مرور در شهر کویته و یا هم هنگام کار در مغازه های خود، در اثر حملات افراد مسلح کشته شده اند.
در یک‌ماه گذشته دست‌کم ۱۵ تن در حملات جداگانه در شهر کویته بلوچستان کشته شده اند که همه هزاره و از اهالی بلوچستان بوده اند.
هزاره های بلوچستان این قتلها را هدفمند می دانند و می گویند آنها از ادامه این وضعیت به ستوه آمده اند.
احمد کهزاد، رهبر حزب دموکراتیک هزاره‌ها از دولت پاکستان خواست بساط عاملان قتل هزاره‌ها را برچیند
مقام های دولتی در ایالت بلوچستان پاکستان نیز از ادامه این وضعیت نگرانند. آنها نیز پذیرفته‌اند که دولت تلاش لازم را برای جلوگیری از کشتار هزاره‌ها نکرده است.
نواب ذوالفقار مگسی فرماندار ایالت بلوچستان در دیدار باگروه هشت نفری حزب دموکراتیک هزاره گفته است حوادثی مانند قتل های هدفمند و تروریسم قابل تاسف است.
نواب مگسی از حکومت ایالتی و مرکزی خواست تا علیه گروه هایی که عامل این قتلها هستند اقدام کند. او هشدار داد که ادامه این وضعیت می تواند پاکستان را درگیر یک جنگ داخلی کند.
سال گذشته نیز اعتراض‌های مشابهی نسبت به آنچه قتل های سیستماتیک هزاره های خوانده شد، در کشورهای مختلف جهان در برابر نمایندگی های سیاسی پاکستان به راه افتاد.
احمد کهزاد، دبیرکل حزب دموکراتیک هزاره ها در گفتگو با نصیره محب، خبرنگار بی بی سی، گفت آنها از حکومت، نیروهای امنیتی و اطلاعاتی پاکستان می‌خواهند با راه اندازی عملیات فوری و وسیع بساط گروه ها و افرادی را که عامل قتل‌های زنجیره ای هزاره ها هستند، برچیند.

Magsi vows to end target killing within Balochistan

By: Zuhaeb Nazir, Uploaded: 13th April 2012

QUETTA: Zulfiqar Magsi, Governor Balochistan, raised high concern for his province saying that he suspected a civil war to erupt if the bloodshed continued within the province as a result of target killings.

Convening a meeting with his provincial members and the Hazara democratic members, the governor, threw vast questions upon his cabinet members by blatantly expressing that there was no need for such a large cabinet when the security position within the province can not be improved.

The Governor was really stressed with the current law and order situation as he stated that Balochistan’s law enforcement officials had failed to control the security condition within the province. He further elaborated this by stating that individuals were killed on a regular basis within the province and not a single alleged person was arrested with respect to such horrendous acts.

Magsi was of the view that if the military was to be summoned to control the security condition within the province, it would create problems for the civil administration.

The Governor issued strict orders for Balochistan Home Secretary Naseebullah Bazai, instructing him to instigate an onslaught against the offenders.

Balochistan governor fears civil war in province



Members of the Ethnic Hazara Shia community mourn the killing of their relatives at a hospital in Quetta on April 9, 2012, following a targeted attack by gunmen.—AFP Photo

QUETTA: Governor Balochistan Nawab Zulfiqar Ali Magsi on Friday said he feared a civil war would erupt in the province if target killings continued unabated, DawnNews reported.

Speaking to provincial ministers and members of the Hazara Democratic Party, the governor questioned the strength of the cabinet, saying there was no need for a cabinet this large if the provincial government was unable to curtail the deteriorating law and order situation in the province.

“Time and again, more and more people are becoming victims of target killings, and not a single suspect has been taken into custody as yet. This is a proof of our government and law enforcement authorities’ failure,” said Magsi.

“If the military was summoned to restore the law and order in the province, then it will be problematic for the civilian government and the administration,” he added.

Magsi ordered the Provincial Home Secretary Naseebullah Bazai to immediately take notice of target killings and initiate a crackdown on the purported miscreants.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Indonesia finds no sign of missing boat



Indonesian authorities say there has been no sign of a missing boat which was reported to be carrying dozens of Afghan refugees and had sent a distress signal.

The Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) said it had been contacted on Thursday afternoon by a refugee advocacy group which had spoken to people on the boat who said it was in distress.

AMSA said it had passed that message on to Indonesian authorities.

"There's no sign of the boat yet. Five rescue boats from police and the national search and rescue agency are near the area, and a helicopter is on its way," said Murtadi, a search and rescue official in Indonesia's West Nusa Tenggara province, on Friday.

He said they were searching off the coast of Sumbawa island, near the resort island of Bali.

A refugee advocacy group based in Brisbane said it had received a distress phone call from someone on the boat on Thursday, and alerted AMSA.

"Given the message was the vessel was actually sinking, we acted pretty quickly to contact the Indonesians," an AMSA spokesman told AFP.

He said Australian authorities had been told the boat was carrying about 60 people and was off Sumbawa island.

Ian Rintoul, the Australian refugee advocate who alerted AMSA, spoke to some of the people on the boat on Thursday.

"They could see Sumbawa but the boat was starting to drift to sea. The boat was starting to take water. The seas were pretty rough," he told AFP.

They were "extremely, extremely distressed - verging on hysterical at times," he said.

The refugees on board were mostly ethnic Hazaras from Afghanistan, with some children on board, according to Rintoul's information.

On Sunday a Singapore-registered tanker rescued about 120 Australia-bound asylum seekers - all males and mostly Afghans and some Iranians - from their sinking wooden boat.

They disembarked in Indonesia after two days of refusing to get off the docked tanker and insisting they be allowed to continue their journey to Australia.

Thousands of asylum seekers head through South-East Asian countries on their way to Australia every year and many link up with people smugglers in Indonesia for the dangerous voyage, often on rickety, overloaded boats.

In December, a boat carrying about 250 mostly Afghan and Iranian asylum seekers sank in Indonesian waters on its way to Christmas Island. Only 47 people survived.

VIEW: When the state becomes ideological —Shahab Usto



Pakistan, like a multi-ethnic, multi-sect and autocratic Sudan, has failed to evolve such a democratic or societal consensus on its ‘ideological identity’

Ideological states or entities being inherently schismatic, unleash countervailing forces, and more so when they grow weaker. ‘Ideological’ Pakistan is coming to grips with the countervailing forces in the form of increasing nationalist, ethnic and sectarian challenges.

Ironically, Pakistan stands closer to Sudan than Israel or Iran. Israeli Zionist identity has faced internal and external threats, which it has met using a democratically-evolved consensus on retaining the state’s identity. The enormous support of the US-led west has also come to the aid of Israel, if not its identity, as a quid pro quo for protecting the former’s interests in the region.

Iran’s Islamist identity, with its attendant anti-US-Israel and anti-Salafi-Arab overtones, has remained threatened by internal, regional and global adversaries. Iran has legitimised this identity through a proto-democratic polity and a popularly recognised institution of the Wilayat-al-Faqih (the guardianship of the jurists), which ‘lead and govern Islamic society’. As a result, Iran’s Islamist identity has faced little threat from inside. It is the US-led west, Israel and the neighbouring Arab states that perceive it as a game changer in the regional balance of power. Hence, efforts are afoot to deny it nuclear capability.

Pakistan, like a multi-ethnic, multi-sect and autocratic Sudan, has failed to evolve such a democratic or societal consensus on its ‘ideological identity’. Islam has been used as a larger banner overarching the state. But under it lies many a sect. True, the constitution and laws must comply with the Quran and Sunnah, but where is the machinery required to interpret and rationalise Quran and Sunnah to remove scholastic disharmony? The Council of Islamic Ideology that was meant to perform this very important function has long fallen victim to the ills that it should have treated — religio-political schisms — in the first place.

As a result, the state has become a sectarian battlefield. A violent and partisan version of Islam has emerged and crowded out the moderate and inclusive narrative of Islam. The state has lost the ‘ideological’ legitimacy in the wake of all-round religious and sectarian divisions. The powerful and violent sectarian forces are now challenging its writ and internal and external policies.

The state also used the ‘ideology’ to negate the multiplicity of ethno-cultural reality, the identities of the sub-national groups that pre-existed the state of Pakistan. They had put faith and credit in the 1940 resolution, which envisaged a confederation of ‘states’ among the Muslim majority provinces of united India. The prospects of regaining autonomy from a socio-politically dominant Hindu majority and the resulting political rewards for the local feudal elites and the nascent Muslim bureaucracy belonging to the UP, CP and Bihar, had galvanised the three major nationalities — Sindhi, Punjabi, Bengali — to opt for Pakistan. However, the Pashtuns and the Baloch had resisted joining the new state until the last moment, and even after the creation of the state.

These nationalities turned ‘hostile’ when an autocratic and centrist state used ‘Islamist identity’ to override the ‘national question’ that had arisen when the Bengali, Sindhi, Pashtun and Baloch leadership challenged the validity of this identity. They also resisted the ‘machinations’ of the Punjabi military and feudal leadership and the muhajir (immigrants) bureaucracy and intelligentsia to create One Unit. The ‘identity’ politics of the state continued until its spinoff, Bengali identity politics, broke away the eastern limb of the state.

Even then, the state refused to give up on its identity politics. The dissolution of One Unit gave way to multi-ethnic provinces. Thus, large chunks of the Seraikis were included in Punjab; Balochistan contained swathes of Pushtun areas; Khyber Pakhtunkhwa received the Hazaras, which previously made part of Punjab, though they were ethnically distinct from both Pashtuns and Punjabis, and Sindh, where many mohajirs had settled, divided along a rural-urban divide. Today, every province has both sectarian and ethnic conflicts. The state, bound by its identity, is increasingly failing to resolve these conflicts using constitutional and democratic tools.

Instead, socio-economic crises are fanning these conflicts. The federal kitty is in the red. The provinces are now burdened with running the social sector that has been devolved to them in the wake of constitutional reforms. Therefore, ethnic and sectarian frictions are more likely to increase in the coming years.

Already, provincial politics is increasingly resonating with ethnic sentiments. The devolution of administrative and financial powers from the Centre to the provinces will further reinforce a tug of war among the various ethnic groups for the allocation of resources and utilisation of powers. South Punjab is clamouring against injustices, as does Hazara, and Quetta is an even more dangerous trajectory. But Sindh is the real prism of the emergence of nationalist politics. Many a sociological and demographic factor favours this trend. On the one hand, the Urdu-speaking political leadership is facing the crunch of the Pashtun influx in Karachi, forcing it to launch a violent ‘resistance’ against the ANP, the Pashtun representative. On the other, an increasing number of Sindhi-speaking middle class are taking to the urban areas, particularly Karachi. They are forced to leave their rural haunts by a combination of factors — lack of economic opportunities, decrepit social and physical infrastructures, tribal feuds, worsening law and order, and a search for better education. But they lack political support, let alone an ethnic militia of their own to protect them from an array of organised ethnic militias blocking their way in Karachi.

Sindh is faced with a touch-and-go situation. The PPP government has failed to contain both the feudal-tribal oppression in rural society and the ethnic killings in the metropolis. No wonder, obituaries are being written on the PPP’s future in Sindh. As the outpouring of nationalist sentiments on the sudden and ‘unusual’ death of a Sindhi nationalist Bashir Qureshi show, Sindh may also turn into another Balochistan.

The writer is a lawyer and academic. He can be reached at shahabusto@hotmail.com

From the wreckage of sectarianism


From the Newspaper | 



DESPITE the virtual media blackout of Gilgit-Baltistan it is becoming increasingly clear that sectarian violence in the entire region is spiralling out of control.

Meanwhile, the systematic attacks on the Hazaras of Quetta continue unabated. It is hardly surprising then that Shias everywhere are talking conspiracy even as militant Sunnis of all varieties are doing everything in their power to prove the conspiracy theorists right.

A conspiracy is that which is hidden from the public eye, a plan hatched by unknown elements hell-bent on causing maximum possible harm to the adversary. By this definition, organised attacks such as those that have been carried out in recent times are a conspiracy only in the sense that immeasurable harm has been caused to the community being targeted. Who is doing the killing is hardly a secret.

In Quetta, a couple of ‘banned’ and ‘defunct’ organisations have taken responsibility for most of the attacks. It scarcely matters that the killers have not been as forthcoming in Gilgit-Baltistan (or the media willing to break with the ‘greater national interest’ in its adhering to the terms of the blackout).

The Lashkar-i-Jhangvi (LJ), after all, is just another name for a nexus of social forces and state institutions that has unapologetically transformed Pakistan’s social and political landscape since the dark years of Ziaul Haq.

Madressahs, a retrogressive public educational curriculum, a pro-jihadi media discourse — these and many other dimensions of Pakistan’s love affair with millenarianism have been in and out of the news for years, in the English press at least.

Commentators, myself included, have emphasised the continuing refusal of our holy guardians to give up on hare-brained schemes such as strategic depth that have shredded the innards of this society.

But there has been, till now, not enough focus on arguably the most dangerous trend of all: that otherwise forward-thinking people spread out across the length and breadth of this country, almost despite themselves, are starting to conform to the exclusivist discourse that the militants on all sides are championing.

Beyond the alarmism that afflicts the chattering classes the objective evidence is relatively conclusive; most Pakistanis are not bigots, even if many are cowed into silence by the issuers of the proverbial fatwas.

At best most of us are hypocrites who have imbibed the Ziaist imperative of demonstrating religiosity in public and otherwise engaging in distinctly ‘un-Islamic’ practices — as far as the mullahs are concerned — in the comfort of our own homes.

Minority communities that have been victimised consistently over a period of time — some even before the 1980s — have understandably looked within themselves to cope with the tyranny of the majority. This tendency has, however, not necessarily given rise to reaction. In fact, there have been many notable progressive outcomes, including a marked desire of more affluent members of the community to look after those endowed with much less.

Where some form of reaction has come to light, as in the case of Shia militancy in the 1990s, a significant part of the community has rejected it. Many young, educated Shia who have, for one reason or the other, been taken in by the appeal of Shia militancy, subsequently recanted and generally espouse a principled politics of non-violence and promote inter-faith harmony.

But it is now important to ask whether or not there may be countervailing trends emerging. Individuals hailing from minority communities active in the social media are starting to evince more alienation than might have been the case even a few years ago. Anger and resentment are becoming more common as the perception of perennial victimhood becomes more pronounced.

Balochistan is the best example of how systematic brutalisation can precipitate extremely dangerous social conflicts between relatively disempowered communities. Ethnic Baloch have long felt victimised by the Pakistani state, but xenophobic trends within the Baloch nationalist movement have historically remained relatively muted.

The Shia Hazara community settled mostly in Quetta has, for the most part, coexisted with Baloch and Pakhtuns and integrated itself into the wider society. Pakhtuns are probably the most upwardly mobile of the three major communities, but this is not to suggest that they constitute a dominant ethnic group per se.

It is impossible to ignore the fact that tensions between all three communities have intensified greatly in recent times. Hazaras and Baloch in particular have become less likely to express any measure of empathy for one another, and it is noticeable that otherwise eloquent progressives on both sides are now in the business of competing over which community faces more systematic and structural violence.

The situation in Gilgit-Baltistan has been on knife-edge for much longer. Sectarian clashes which were a minor speck on the social landscape before the Zia years erupt in all their fury at almost regular intervals, radicalising otherwise ordinary people and arousing suspicions that persist long after the particular phase of violence has passed.

Of course, it matters that those charged with protecting the public peace are heavily implicated in destroying it, and that our holy guardians and their sycophants jealously guard the ideological apparatuses that produce hate and violence.

But simply reiterating that the state is culpable will not force it to change its historical posture. The fact of the matter is that too many people in society are starting to believe they have to take sides in a manner that makes it more difficult in the long-term to build an alternative consensus. It is necessary to face up to this growing polarisation and then do something about it.

In particular, as many of us as possible need to speak up not only for our own but for all those who are victims of wanton violence and systematic exclusion. The biggest burden must be owned by majorities, especially religious and ethnic ones. But the sane voices within minority communities have a role to play too, as they have in the past.

If all those who believe that there is still something to be salvaged from the wreckage of sectarian and all other forms of organised violence do come together and say what needs to be said, there is hope yet that all the blood that has been spilt will not have been in vain.

The writer teaches at Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad.

Sectarian attacks: Three Hazaras slain in Quetta attacks


Published: April 13, 2012


Hazara Democratic Party says it will stage a protest outside Governor House. PHOTO: FILE


QUETTA: In the second such sectarian incident this week, three people from the Hazara community were gunned down in separate attacks on Thursday.


Police said assailants on a motorbike opened fire at a tea store on Shahrae Iqbal, killing a man instantly and injuring the owner of the store.


A few minutes after, armed men attacked another shop belonging to the Hazara community on Archer Road, around 500 metres from Shahrae Iqbal. As a result of indiscriminate firing, two people died on the spot.


Witnesses said the attacks were carried out by the same men.


“The victims belong to the Hazara community. It appears to be a case of sectarian target killings,” senior police official Hassan Buzdar said.


The Hazara Democratic Party has announced it would protest outside the Governor House and Chief Minister Secretariat today (Friday).


All businesses and restaurants on Prince Road, Liaquat Bazaar, Abdul Sattar Road, Qandahari Bazaar and adjacent areas were closed after the attacks.


Earlier on Monday, six Shia Hazarawals were gunned down in Quetta. The outlawed outfit Lashkar-i-Jhangvi claimed responsibility for the killings. There have, however, been no claims for the latest attack.


Weigh lifting body official slain


In a separate incident, the general secretary of Balochistan’s weightlifting association Abdul Jabbar Khilji was shot dead. He was on his way home when he was targeted.


“It is premature to comment on the murder since investigations are underway,” a local police official said.


Published in The Express Tribune, April 13th, 2012.

Address religious intolerance to curb sectarian killings: HRCP




12 April, 2012




LAHORE: The continuous spilling of blood in sectarian killings in Quetta and Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) is a result of failure to address religious intolerance in society, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) said on Wednesday.


In a meeting, the commission said, "HRCP is alarmed by the continuing sectarian bloodshed in Pakistan, particularly in Quetta and GB. The killings demonstrate a disturbing pattern and appear to be part of a well-planned sequence.


It has been stated that miscreants from Afghanistan have been involved. That may be one problem, but it certainly is not the only one. The mindless bloodshed that we witness day in and day out is rooted in religious intolerance cultivated by the state."


The meeting also said, "The people are paying the price of indifference with their lives. Rather than wasting time on addressing mere symptoms, the root cause of the problem must be identified and addressed.


Instead of living in denial, we must now identify the policies that strengthen extremism and promote faith-based hatred in society. These constitute the single biggest threat to Pakistan.

CCTV; 6 Hazaras Killed In Quetta Baluchistan

Three more Hazaras shot dead in Quetta



QUETTA: Three people belonging to the Hazara community were gunned down and another wounded in separate incidents of target killings in the provincial capital on Thursday. According to police, unidentified assailants opened fire on a tea store on Shahrah-e-Iqbal, killing a man on the spot and injuring the owner of the store. The assailants managed to escape from the crime scene. The body and the injured were taken to the Provincial Sandeman Hospital. The injured was later referred to the Combined Military Hospital (CMH) because of his critical wounds. The injured, the owner of the store, was identified as Sakhi Dad. A few minutes after the aforementioned incident, armed assailants attacked another shop on Archer Road, about half a kilometre from Shahrah-e-Iqbal. As a result of indiscriminate firing of the attackers, two people belonging to the Hazara community, Nor Ali and Nor Ahmed, died on the spot. The attackers fled the scene. A heavy contingent of police and security forces reached the crime scenes and the hospital to prevent any untoward incident. All shops, trade centres and restaurants on Prince Road, Liaquat Bazar, Abdul Sattar Road and Qandahari Bazar were closed after the incidents. The Hazara Democratic Party (HDP) announced to stage a sit-in outside the Governor’s House and the Chief Minister’s Secretariat today (Friday) to protest the killings. staff report

Asylum boat lost off Indonesia, 64 feared drowned

BY: PETER ALFORD, JAKARTA CORRESPONDENT From: The Australian April 13, 2012 12:00AM

Source: The Australian

INDONESIAN water police were last night searching waters off Sumbawa Island for about 60 asylum-seekers, including seven children, whose Australia-bound boat is believed to have capsized in rough seas.

Last night, more than seven hours after water police headquarters in Jakarta was notified of the incident, rescuers had not located the boat or passengers.

The police search by five vessels and a helicopter was suspended overnight and there was no word of survivors.

The Australian understands the boat left Bali late on Wednesday night with 64 passengers, ethnic Hazaras from Afghanistan and Pakistan, and crew. The wooden vessel is believed to have capsized about noon off the southwest coast of Sumbawa, but remained afloat. At 7.30pm central Indonesian time (10.30pm AEST), a relative of an Afghan aboard the boat said he received a mobile phone message that the vessel was sinking

The chief of Indonesian water police operations, Lieutenant Colonel Gunardi, said his officers had been able to speak to several asylum-seekers by mobile phones but had not found them by nightfall. A Sumbawa policeman said waves in the area were 2m to 3m high.

Three patrol police boats and two tugs and a helicopter from mining company Newmont Nusa Tenggara had been searching during the afternoon.

The fishing boat was heading for Australian waters in the area of Ashmore Reef.

A spokesman for the Australian Maritime Safety Authority said its Rescue Co-ordination Centre had received a phone call from a refugee advocacy centre in Brisbane to advise that a vessel was sinking off Indonesia. AMSA assessed the information as credible and passed it to Indonesian authorities.

Smuggling activity has intensified in the central and eastern Indonesian islands in the past month; six boats in the past month have reached Ashmore, Scott Reef and the Tiwi Islands.

The past week has seen a resurgence of smuggling on the main routes from Java to Christmas Island, with two boats carrying 255 people intercepted near the island on Tuesday night.

The Australian

کوئٹہ: شاہراہ اقبال اور لیاقت بازار میں فائرنگ، 3 افراد جاں بحق، 2 زخمی

کوئٹہ … کوئٹہ کے علاقوں شاہراہ اقبال اور لیاقت بازار میں فائرنگ سے 3 افراد جاں بحق اور 2 زخمی ہوگئے ہیں۔ ریسکیو ذرائع کے مطابق کوئٹہ کے علاقوں شاہراہ اقبال اور لیاقت بازار میں نامعلوم افراد نے فائرنگ کی ہے جس کے نتیجے میں 3 افراد جاں بحق اور 2 زخمی ہوگئے ہیں، واقعے کے بعد ملزمان فرار ہونے میں کامیاب ہوگئے۔

Jang Urdu

پاکستانیوں کے گلے شکوے

ہارون رشید

بی بی سی اردو ڈاٹ کام، اسلام آباد
آخری وقت اشاعت: جمعرات 12 اپريل 2012

کبھی شدت پسندی کی وارداتیں تو کبھی قدرتی آفات کی گرفت
مسئلے مسائل تو ہر کسی کے ساتھ بندھے ہیں۔ یہ تو زندگی کا لازمی جز ہیں۔ ان کے بغیر زندگی بھی شاید بد مزہ معمول بن کر رہ جائے۔ تو پھر پاکستان میں بعض لوگ اپنے ساتھ ہونے والے ظلم و جبر پر کیوں اتنا چیختے چلاتے ہیں؟ تو یہ چیخ و پکار بھی معمولات زندگی بن گئی ہے۔
ایسے میں مجھے شکایت گلگت، کرم اور کوئٹہ کی اہل تشیع آبادی سے بھی ہے۔ لیکن اپنے سے پہلے ان کی دو اہم شکایات دیکھ لیتے ہیں۔

شکایت نمبر ون: حکومت ان کے تحفظ کے لیے کچھ نہیں کر رہی؟

جواب: ایسے سنگین معاملات حکومت آپ اور مجھ پر چھوڑ دیتی ہے لہذا ’حکومت ندارد’ ان کی سمجھ میں کیوں نہیں آتا۔ بجلی کے لیے جنریٹر، پانی کے لیے بورنگ اور روزانہ کا کوڑا کرکٹ پھینکنے کے لیے گلی کے کونے کا انتظام خود کرنا پڑتا ہے تو پھر تحفظ کی ذمہ داری ان گنت مسائل میں گھری ناتواں حکومت پر کیوں ڈالی جائے؟ یہ آج کی بات تو نہیں کب سے سلسلہ چل رہا ہے ہاں اس میں البتہ تیزی اب یقینا آئی ہے۔

پھر پاکستان کی مجموعی آبادی کے تقریباً بیس فیصد طبقے کے لیے حکومت کیا خصوصی اقدامات کرے گی؟ وہ آپ سے کئی گنا کم ہندوؤں اور عیسائیوں کا تحفظ نہیں کرسکتی تو آپ کی آبادی تو ماشا اللہ تقریباً پندرہ بیس فیصد ہیں۔ پھر اتنے بکھرے ہوئے ہیں آپ پورے ملک میں کہ حکومت کی دو آنکھیں کہاں کہاں آپ پر نظر رکھیں۔

سیاچن جیسی قدرتی آفت سے ہر آنکھ آبدیدہ ہے

حکومت کے خاموش تماشائی بننے کے پیچھے بھی ایک چالاک حکمت کار فرما ہے۔ معاف کیجیے گا اس کا میرے سازشی دماغ کے مطابق مقصد ان کی آبادی کو شاید ’مینج ایبل’ سطح پر لانا ہے۔ شدت پسند تنظیموں نے بھی تو ہر جگے ہی جال پھیلائے ہوئے ہیں۔ ایک جگہ ہو تو بات ہو۔ بےچارے رحمان ملک کراچی بھاگیں، کوئٹہ جائیں یا گلگت کا رخ کریں۔ نہ جانے کیوں ابھی تک قبائلی علاقوں کے لوگ ان سے محفوظ کیسے ہیں؟

شکایت نمبر دو: پاکستانی میڈیا توجہ نہیں دے رہا؟

جواب: پاکستان میں بےچارے نیوز چینلز ہیں ہی کتنے ہیں؟ دو تین درجن ہی تو ہیں۔ پھر اس مسائلستان میں مسائل کی کیا کوئی کمی ہے؟ بس ایک مسئلے کو سر سے پوری طرح پکڑ نہیں پاتے کہ دوسرا دُم دبا کر ان کے ہاتھوں سے نکل جاتا ہے۔ بلوچستان کو چھوا نہیں کہ گلگت گرم ہوگیا، زرداری کا پیچھا چھوڑا نہیں کہ سیاچن جیسی قدرتی آفت سر پر آن پڑی۔

خبروں کی اس بھرمار میں ایک دشواری یہ بھی پیش آتی ہے کہ تھانے کے ایس ایچ او کا تبادلہ اہم ہے یا وینا ملک کا نیا چکر۔ پھر خبر جتنی بھی متوازن ہو یہودی یا پھر بھارتی ایجنٹ کا لیبل تو ہمیشہ تیار جیب میں پڑا رہتا ہے۔ ایسے میں صحافی غریب کرے تو کیا کرے۔

پاکستان میں بہتری شاید تبھی آئے گی جب فرقہ وارانہ حملوں کا الگ، خودکش حملوں کا الگ اور آنے ٹکے کے جرائم کا الگ چینل ہو۔ تب سب کو مناسب کوریج نہ ملنے کی شکایت نہیں رہے گی۔

حکومتی موقف:جس قسم کے حالات سے پاکستانی اب تک گزرے ہیں اگر قتل و غارت گری کے خلاف احتجاج نہ ہو، بجلی و گیس کی قلت کے ستائے بھی نہ ہوں تو پیپلز پارٹی کو شک ہے کہ وہ ویسے ہی سڑک پر نکلنے کی کوئی نہ کوئی وجہ ڈھونڈ ہی لیں گے۔ کسی اور کے خلاف نہیں تو حکمرانوں کے خلاف ہی دو چار نعرے لگا کر اندر کی بھڑاس نکالنے کی انہیں عادت سی ہوگئی ہے۔ بقول حکومت انہیں گھروں میں خاموش نہ بیٹھنے کی عادت سے ہوگئی ہے۔ یہی مسئلہ ہے ان کا؟

نوٹ: میرا طنز اپنی جگہ لیکن ان کی شکایت بھی دیگر پاکستانیوں کے گلے شکوے کی طرح وزن رکھتی ہیں۔ اس کالم کے شائع ہونے کے بعد دو چار غصہ بھری ای میلیں تو آ ہی جائیں گی۔

BBC URDU

Man gunned down in Quetta

QUETTA: Unidentified armed men gunned down one person and injured another in Qandhari bazaar in the provincial capital here on Thursday evening.

Police said that unknown gunmen riding bike opened fire at people standing in Qandhari bazaar in the metropolis. As a result, one person was killed and another wounded, police said adding that the assailants managed to escape from the scene.

The law enforcement personnel rushed to the site and shifted the dead body and the injured to Sandeman Civil Hospital. No cause of the attack could be ascertained. The name of the dead is identified as Sakhi and the injured as Muhammad Hussain.

A group of people and shopkeepers gathered on the Jinnah road and staged demonstration against the incident. The police have launched efforts to trace out the attackers. Further probe was underway. (APP)

THE NEWS

Quetta is the hub of crimes: Official

Quetta is the hub of crimes: Official
By Shehzad Baloch
Published: April 12, 2012

Earlier on March 28, around 180 DSPs were demoted according to the orders of the Supreme Court.

QUETTA:

Half of the crimes reported in Balochistan emanate from Quetta, according to Chief Secretary Babar Yaqoob Fateh Mohammad. He added that if the police managed to control crimes in the provincial capital alone, the law and order situation across the province would significantly improve.

In his first interaction with the media after taking over the post of chief secretary, Babar said Quetta and its surrounding areas were densely populated, resulting in the high rate of crimes in and around the city.

“The improvement of the law and order situation in Quetta will have a significant impact throughout Balochistan. Our government is, therefore, focusing on strengthening the police (in Quetta),” he told journalists at the 72nd Passing-out Parade of the Balochistan Police.
Babar added that there was a dire need of training, modern equipment and resources to strengthen the police force. “The government has decided to earmark a large amount for the Balochistan Police in the next budget,” he added.

In response to a query about highway hold-ups and increasing robberies, the chief secretary said the provincial government was making efforts to reduce crime on the highways. “The police have recovered several people who were kidnapped on the Sibi-Jacobabad highway. It shows that the police are not sitting quietly.”

While Babar appeared confident about the police, he refused to comment over rampant kidnappings in the province. “The Supreme Court has already taken this up, thus I will not comment on kidnappings,” he added.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 12th, 2012.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

معترضان بامیان‌ چراغ نفتی به سفارت آمریکا هدیه دادند

محمود کوچی
بی بی سی
به روز شده: 15:22 گرينويچ - چهارشنبه 11 آوريل 2012 - 23 فروردین 1391

شهروندان بامیان سال گذشته، در اعتراض به نبود برق چراغ نفتی بزرگی را در مرکز شهر نصب کردند و امسال چراغ مشابهی را به سفارت آمریکا هدیه دادند

ده‌ها تن از نمایندگان نهادهای مدنی بامیان که در راه اندازی اعتراض‌های مدنی و سمبولیک مشهورند، با گردهمایی در مقابل ساختمان مجلس نمایندگان افغانستان، علیه آنچه تبعیض در مصارف کمک های بین المللی می خوانند، اعتراض کردند.

این اعتراض با سکوت برگزار شد و معترضان در پایان اعتراض خود یک چراغ نفتی بزرگ را به نمایندگان مجلس دادند.

معترضان از نمایندگان مجلس خواستند، این چراغ نفتی را به سفارت آمریکا در کابل، هدیه دهند تا آنها بدانند که ولایت بامیان هنوز برق ندارند و از میلیاردها دلار کمک‌های جامعه جهانی در بیش از ده سال گذشته، چیزی نصیب آنها نشده است.

شماری از نمایندگان مجلس سنا و نمایندگان، نیز به رسم حمایت از معترضان به جمع آنها پیوستند.
محمد علم ایزدیار، نایب اول مجلس سنا به معترضان گفت، خواستهای آنان را با مقام های دولت افغانستان و جامعه بین المللی در میان خواهد گذاشت.

معترضان در پایان قطعنامه ای را نیز صادر کردند که در آن به توسعه متوازن در مناطق مختلف، رفع هر نوع تبیض سیاسی و قومی، مشارکت عادلانه در قدرت، تاکید شده است.

بامیان در مرکز افغانستان از آرام ترین مناطق افغانستان در ده سال گذشته بوده، اما توجهی چندانی به بازسازی این ولایت نشده است

معترضان همچنین از دولت افغانستان خواستند، سیاستی را که بعد از ۲۰۱۴ و بعد از خروج نیروهای خارجی از افغانستان در پیش خواهند گرفت، بصورت شفاف برای آحاد مردم افغانستان توضیح دهد.

مدال تقدیر به الاغ‌های آب رسان

در سالهای گذشته، شهروندان بامیان در اعتراض به عدم توجه دولت به جاده های این ولایت، بخشی از جاده اصلی مرکز ولایت را در یک اعتراض مدنی، کاهگل کردند.

شهروندان بامیان همچنین در اعتراض به عدم توجه دولت به آب آشامدنی این ولایت، به الاغ های خود که از آنها برای تامین آب آشامیدنی استفاده می کنند، مدال دادند.

و همچنین چراغ نفتی بزرگی را در اعتراض به بی توجهی دولت به برق این ولایت، ساختند و آن را در چهار راه مرکزی شهر بامیان نصب کردند.

بعد از آن این چهار راه به "چهار راه هریکین" (چراغ نفتی) مسما شده است.
این اقدامات شهروندان بامیان، این ولایت را در به راه اندازی اعتراض های مدنی، آرام و شایسته پر آوازه ساخته است.

روز ملی اعتراض مدنی

در قطعنامه پایانی معترضان بامیان همچنین آمده است که دولت افغانستان روز ۲۲ حمل/ فروردین را به عنوان روز ملی اعتراضهای مدنی در تقویم کشور ثبت کند. ۲۲ حمل روزی است که بامیانی ها با کاهگل کردن جاده مرکز شهر نخستین اعتراض مدنی و سمبولیک خود را آغاز کردند.

بامیان کوهستانی و برفگیر است، مقام های محلی و موسسه آقا خان سعی کرده با رواج اسکی، صنعت جهانگردی بامیان را احیا کنند

اعتراضها و تظاهرات در افغانستان بارها، خسارات جدی مالی و در مواردی حتی تلفات جانی را نیز در پی داشته است.

کارشناسان معتقدند که اگر روش های مسالمت آمیز شهروندان بامیانی در راه اندازی اعتراض های مدنی، دنبال شود، هم از تلفات و خسارات ناشی از اعتراض های خشن جلو گیری می شود و هم صدای معترضان خوبتر به گوش دولت و جامعه جهانی می رسد.

ولایت پرآوازه اما فراموش شده

ولایت بامیان در مرکز افغانستان از امن ترین مناطق این کشور در یک دهه گذشته بوده اما دولت به بازسازی این ولایت و اعتراض های مدنی پی هم ساکنان توجهی نکرده است.
مجسمه های بزرگ بودا، و طبعیت خوش و آب و هوای بامیان در سالهای قبل از جنگ، این ولایت را به مرکزی برای جذب جهانگردان بدل کرده بود و از این طریق درآمد خوبی را نصیب افغانستان می کرد.
در سالهای جنگ و بویژه بعد از انهدام مجسمه های بزرگ بودا توسط طالبان، حالا صنعت جهانگردی بامیان هم رونق چندانی ندارد.

اگرچه مقام های محلی بامیان و شماری از نهادهای بین المللی از جمله موسسه آقاخان، در چند سال اخیر سعی کرده اند، صنعت جهانگردی بامیان را احیا کنند اما نا امنی راه های منتهی به بامیان توفیق چنین برنامه هایی را به حد اقل رسانده است.

BBC Farsi

Geo TV; Prince Road victims were buried and protest schedules are announced

120 Afghan Refugees Escorted Off Ship at Java Dock

April 11, 2012

Merak, Banten. Indonesian authorities on Tuesday managed to persuade about 120 Australia-bound immigrants from Afghanistan to disembark from a tanker that rescued them after their boat leaked, officials said.

The Afghans had earlier refused to leave the Singapore-flagged tanker MT Hermia, which had been docked at Merak, on the western tip of Java, since the accident on Sunday.

They relented after officials, including representatives from the International Organization for Migration, promised they would not be sent to an immigration detention center, police said.

Most of the immigrants left the boat voluntarily but some had to be dragged off by authorities after a dramatic scene on deck when two of them began shouting: “We want to die, we want to die,” an AFP correspondent said.

The pair began to bleed after repeatedly beating their heads with metal objects.

“We have evacuated all of the asylum seekers and they are now being taken to the Feri Merak hotel,” near Merak, said immigration agency spokesman Maryoto Sumadi.

The immigrants were driven away on two buses, including the bleeding pair who were not seriously injured.

Earlier on Tuesday, the Afghans had said they would not disembark until Indonesia agreed to provide a vessel to allow them to continue to Australia, officials said.

A few hours before they disembarked, an Afghan speaking on behalf of the group had said they wanted certain reassurances before agreeing to leave.

“We will get off the boat only if they promise that no one will be put into detention centers and no one will go to jail,” said the man, who identified himself only as Atiqullah.

“I have been sent by the others on the boat to convey this message,” he told reporters in English, before returning to the ship.

Maryoto said that those without proper documents would be sent to detention centers.

“We will check which asylum seekers have legal documents identifying them as refugees and which do not,” he said.

In 2009, more than 200 Sri Lankan Tamil asylum seekers refused to get off a boat docked at Merak in a six-month standoff with the authorities, demanding to go to Australia.

They were not granted asylum, while around 80 other Sri Lankans rescued at the same time by an Australian customs vessel were granted a special resettlement deal by the Australian government.

Indonesia is not a signatory to the UN refugee convention and often jails asylum seekers awaiting refugee status. The country has long been a transit point for migrants from the Middle East and South Asia seeking to reach Australia.

DPA & AFP

Jakarta Globe

EDITORIAL: Rampant killings in Balochistan

Why should the unabated slaughter of innocent members of the Hazara Shia community not be taken as genocide committed by the gunmen of the sectarian group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) with impunity. Since the last one year, reports of killings of a number of Hazaras have been surfacing regularly. Every time they are targeted, the government makes tall claims against the saboteurs and about its (unseen, perhaps yet to be started) efforts to bring them to book. The authorities’ response towards the frequent atrocities is inadequate. Had it considered the matter serious enough to ensure the security of the Hazaras, the situation would not have worsened to the present extent. Again on Monday, the Hazara community was targeted as six of its members busy at work were mercilessly sprayed with bullets by unknown armed assailants on two motorbikes in Quetta.

The lethal sectarian phenomenon against the Hazaras that emerged last year has so far taken a large number of precious lives of innocent and peaceful members of this community of Balochistan. LeJ, a notorious sectarian militant banned outfit, has claimed responsibility for the latest outrage to add to last year’s deadly attack on Hazara pilgrims in Mastung. Unfortunately, sectarianism seems to be rampant in a province already under the constant grip of violence due to an ongoing nationalist movement against the atrocities committed by the Frontier Corps (FC) in Balochistan since many years. On the same day, four other killings were reported; including two bullet-riddled bodies found lying in a dump, taking the tortured-to-death toll to a new level, and the murder of two Punjabi men by unknown armed motorcyclists at a bus stand in the Mand area of Turbat. All these killings indicate a constantly deteriorating law and order situation in the volatile province. Where the finding of tortured bodies seem to have become an almost daily tragedy in Balochistan, the trend of killing people belonging to other provinces commonly known as settlers seems to have been revived after a lull. Punjabis mainly bear the brunt of the nationalists’ angst, who do not realise that killing innocents only undermines their just cause. Killings of innocent Punjabis, perceiving them as their real enemy, is a totally wrong tactic, which is bound to bring failure.

It is time the government wakes up from its deep slumber and arrests the culprits of the Hazara carnage. It has to provide security to them. Otherwise, the fire of sectarianism might spread to other areas and against other groups. *

Daily Times

Sectarian militancy thriving in Balochistan

By Syed Shoaib Hasan | From the Newspaper |


A Pakistani rescue worker is seen through the bullet-riddled window of a passenger train following an attack by unknown gunmen in Mach near Quetta.—AP Photo

KARACHI: It is a chilling scene once one realises what is going on, the real horror coming from the cool and unhurried manner of the killers.

Passengers are forced off a bus by what appear to be militants. As a jihadi anthem blares in the background the militants surround them and force them to sit on the ground. Seconds later they open fire with Kalashnikovs, with the resulting carnage being graphically recorded.

A young boy is then seen clasping his hands and begging for mercy. A militant answers by calmly shooting him dead. Another militant walks around the bodies — slowly and deliberately firing into them, to ensure no one escapes. When it’s all over; the camera lens points to the ground as a militant, seen in the shadow, pumping his fist in delight.

This is a video — now posted on the internet — of the massacre of Hazara Shia pilgrims in Balochistan’s Mastung district last year.

For Pakistan’s government, Balochistan remains the most prominent policy failure. Violence has continued to escalate across the province since the PPP-led coalition took power in 2008.

A battle between nationalist insurgents and the Pakistani state is now a dirty and no-holds-barred war in which hundreds of civilians have been killed.

The latest disturbing trend is the increased targeting of Shias, especially the Hazara community. Over a hundred people belonging to them have been shot dead in the province.

The trend is disturbing as Balochistan has always been among the more tolerant of Pakistan’s provinces and sectarian attacks remained rare until 2001.

All that changed after extremist groups such as Sipah-i-Sahaba Pakistan and Jaish-i-Mohammad were banned by General Pervez Musharraf in 2002. A crackdown by the regime followed, forcing their most dangerous militants and ideologues to move to the tribal region.



Punjabi Taliban

Here they came in contact with Taliban militants; both influenced each other and a new sectarian breed came into being in the form of the Punjabi Taliban, now led by Asmatullah Muavia and loyal to Hakimullah Mehsud.

Initially based in South Waziristan, the Punjabi Taliban were ousted after the military operation in 2009. In reprisal, they carried out high-profile attacks such as the one on GHQ in Rawalpindi. Sources say that that particular incident was the turning point and led to a re-think by the establishment.

Security officials — who wish to remain anonymous — say this was because the GHQ standoff was resolved not just by army commandos but mainly through negotiations by Maulana Mohammad Ahmed Ludhianvi, chief of the SSP, who convinced those inside to surrender.

Army officials dismiss these claims. They say military action broke the siege and that the so-called Punjabi Taliban remains their number one enemy.

It may well be that both stories are true, as one security official points out. Ludhianvi’s intervention — while crucial — was definitely only limited to the GHQ attack. He appears to have little control over the Punjabi Taliban leadership, which continues to wreak all sorts of havoc across Pakistan.

Official protocol

However, it’s also clear that Ahmed Ludhianvi now enjoys official protocol. The SSP and Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat, Sipah-i-Sahaba’s current title, are both supposedly proscribed, yet these organisations hold rallies in major cities with ease where arms are openly displayed.

Today it’s clear that the SSP and Lashkar-i-Jhangvi, an even more extreme sectarian outfit, are inter-linked. Maulana Ludhianvi admitted as much to the BBC when he said in an interview that Malik Ishaq, the LJ chief, was released on his guarantees and that the notorious militant now answers to him.

Since Malik Ishaq’s release it’s become easier for the LJ leaders to move around, and they have since started expanding and setting up cells in Balochistan and Gilgit-Baltistan.

These cells are made of locals and have been greatly strengthened, especially in Balochistan — where they operate independently of the LJ central command. There the traditionally secular Baloch — and particularly Brahui — are increasingly turning to the radical Islamist militancy espoused by SSP/LJ.

Security officials — and Shia leaders — say this turn of events is complemented by the growth of sectarian madressahs there. Perhaps the largest Sipah-i-Sahaba seminary outside southern Punjab is in Mastung, in the heart of territory controlled by the Raisani tribe.

Another major reason, according to Shia leaders, is the alleged support by intelligence agencies to groups of pro-government Baloch tribesmen.

Most of these have dual identities — the second being outright sectarian and extremist. It is no surprise, then, that the largest of the groups is considered to be the de facto Lashkar-i-Jhangvi in Balochistan.

All that is perhaps irrelevant for the intelligence agencies, whose main aim is the tried tactic of using religion to suppress nationalism.

Led by a close relative of a senior politician from the province, some of LJ Balochistan’s more high-profile attacks include the killing of Baloch nationalist leader Habib Jalib Baloch and the attacks on the Hazara Shias pilgrims in Mastung.

A senior member of the group accepts it has been involved in attacks to protect the Baloch community – it denies it’s carried out attacks on Shias.

“We are only carrying out defensive actions against people who are supported by foreign intelligence services. The Baloch people are with Pakistan – it’s just that they are scared of the militants.”

He adds that while their group isn’t anti-Shia — the community has elements that act as agents of Iran in Pakistan and they should refrain from this.

Complicity

But Baloch nationalist leaders say a perception is being built up that the Baloch community are targeting the Hazara.

“The Baloch have always been a secular people – it’s the Pashtuns rather than us who have had problems with the Hazaras,” says Nawabzada Jamil Bugti.

“What’s happening is with the complicity of the agencies – everybody knows that the areas where most of the attacks take place – like Mastung – have several FC checkposts nearby.”

“How can the killers escape without their knowledge – or consent?”

While insisting that the Baloch as a whole are not involved in the killings, Nawabzada Bugti acknowledges that some Baloch may be involved.

“The agencies are doing what they did in Bangladesh – where they created groups such as Al Badr and Al Shams.”

“Here it’s the groups like the Baloch Musalla Difa Tanzeem – who regularly target Baloch leaders.”

“If they can kill their own people – what’s to stop them from killings Hazaras on the orders of the agencies?”

Increasingly, it’s LJ Balochistan that has the deadliest militants in the country, men such as Saifullah Kurd and Ramzan Mengal, each responsible for dozens of killings.

Both men added to claims of official complicity when they escaped from maximum-security Anti-Terrorism Force jail in Quetta’s heavily guarded cantonment area. Security officials say they continue to enjoy patronage by some senior Baloch tribal leaders. Hazara leaders in Quetta openly accuse prominent members of provincial Baloch government of allegedly protecting sectarian killers.

But others claim that tribal leaders have no choice; they are increasingly being held hostage to pressure from intelligence agencies and their own increasingly militant Sunni tribesmen. Whatever be the real reason, Balochistan is now being regarded as the biggest, and safest, sanctuary for the country’s fiercest sectarian militants.

The writer is the BBC’s correspondent in Karachi. The views expressed here are his own and not necessarily those of the BBC.

DAWN

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Hazara Muslims call for 10-day strike in SW Pakistan


Pakistan’s Hazara Democratic Party has announced a 10-day strike to protest the targeted killings of Hazara Shia Muslims in the southwestern province of Balochistan, Press TV reports.


A 10-day strike will be held from April 20 to 30, the party chairman Abdul Khaliq Hazara said in Balochistan’s provincial capital Quetta on Tuesday.

He also called for the holding of a conference involving all parties to discuss the killing of innocent Hazara community members.

The announcement comes a day after unknown gunmen riding a motorbike opened fire on a shoe shop, slaying six Shia Muslims and injuring three others in the Hazara region of Quetta.

Hundreds of people took to the streets across the Balochistan province on Tuesday, chanting slogans against the government for failing to arrest the perpetrators.

Meanwhile, shops, markets and educational institutions have been closed in response to the call for the strike over the killings.

Chief Minister of Balochistan Nawab Aslam Raisani has fired six police officials for dereliction of duty and 17 suspects have been arrested in connection with the incident.

No group or individual has claimed responsibility for the Monday's attack.

MS/MAB/MA

Press TV

Saving the Hazara

From the Newspaper | Rafia Zakaria |

IT has been a dark spring for the minority Shia Hazara in Balochistan. On Monday, at least six people from this community were killed and three others were injured in a drive-by shooting for which the banned group Lashkar-i-Jhangvi has claimed responsibility.

A group of people had been sitting in a shoe shop when four assailants on motorcycles opened fire on them, and then escaped.
This was the third such incident in the past 10 days.

On March 29, eight people had been killed in separate incidents of firing around Quetta. In the first attack, assailants opened fire on a bus full of passengers travelling from Hazara Town towards Quetta city. They managed to flee even as people lay injured and dying on the street.

The attack on the bus was a grim repetition of another that is etched on the bloody landscape of Balochistan. In September last year, a group of men and women from Quetta’s Shia Hazara community travelling to Iran were stopped by armed assailants. The attackers told the women, children and the driver of the bus, who was not Hazara, to remain inside.

All the men and boys were taken out of the bus, lined up on the road outside and shot. When the bullets stopped flying, 29 lay dead or dying on the highway where the massacre took place. The place was Mastung, near the border with Iran, and it took the attackers half an hour to accomplish their grim mission.

Yet not a single one of the murderers has been caught. Nearly a month later, on Oct 19, a Crimes Investigation Department report submitted before the Balochistan High Court said that while an important clue had been found regarding the massacre, details could not be disclosed because that would affect further investigation.

And still the killings continue. In the months between last September and now, there have been repeated attacks on the Hazara, who can be physically distinguished from the other people of Balochistan because of their resemblance to their Central Asian and Mongol ancestors.

Again and again the Hazara Shia have been targeted, from poor daily-wage labourers living in Hazara Town to former Olympic athletes leaving their workplaces. They have been assassinated in full view of anonymous onlookers as part of the project of exterminating the Shia from the area.

Edicts issued by the Lashkar-i-Jhangvi in Balochistan, and published in local Urdu and Hazara newspapers, label members of the community as wajib-ul-qatl, or deserving of death. The community has been warned that its settlements in Hazara Town and on Alamdar Road will be transformed into graveyards as the war against them continues.

The words are grim and true; the war against the Hazara has continued in the days following the Mastung attack, with the latest set of killings representing just another episode in this macabre saga of death. Unsurprisingly, the Hazara community — that has not aligned itself with either the Baloch nationalists or the more recently settled Pakhtuns in the area — has become increasingly dejected about its future.

Just days before this latest incident of violence, a report issued by the Balochistan Home Department failed to note with any specificity the lethal conditions faced by the community.

Last week, during a hearing conducted by a three-member bench of the Pakistan Supreme Court, Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry expressed his alarm over the silence, asking members of the Balochistan administration to explain why no one suspected of dumping mutilated bodies or shooting down innocent people is ever apprehended.

Undoubtedly, the Shia Hazara are victims of the ineptitude that so incensed the SC justices last week. But there are other specifics that make the Hazara community particularly hapless among the many suffering people of Balochistan.

First, their small numbers and long-standing loyalties to the Pakistani state, displayed in the military service records of community leaders, puts them at odds with the Baloch nationalist movement.

Second, the location of their enclave in Quetta, sitting close to both the southward road to Karachi and the highways leading to Iran, has in recent years become the centre of global strategic interest which has created incentives for others to drive them out.

The extermination of the community, either through targeted attacks or through the massacres, thus accomplishes not just sectarian aims, but also forces scared Hazaras fleeing the area to either abandon property or sell it at low prices to waiting land-grabbers.

The lack of local avenues of recourse for a festering human rights issue is exacerbated further by the complexities faced abroad.
In previous decades, small minorities such as the Hazara, who have few local options for saving themselves in a milieu wracked by conflict, were able to avail the international human rights platform to draw attention to their plight. Even on this count, the Hazara face a particular disadvantage.

In the United States, last February’s introduction of a resolution by Congressman Dana Rohrabacher has promoted the idea that all those fighting for justice in Balochistan are automatically inimical to the Pakistani state. This misperception is particularly harmful to the Hazara cause since it inaccurately conflates a human rights issue — their right to be free of religious persecution — with a nationalist cause that seeks secession rather than accountability as a solution.

All around the world, it is always the smallest, most peace-loving, least politically connected groups that are selected as targets by those seeking to scare the populations they seek to control.

For the Shia Hazara of Balochistan, who are seeking not independence but their rights under the Pakistani constitution, the dearth of local sympathy and the brashness of global generalisations have colluded to produce a landscape where hope seems as elusive as justice.

The writer is an attorney teaching political philosophy and constitutional law.

rafia.zakaria@gmail.com

DAWN

Six target killing victims buried in Quetta

By Mohammad Zafar

QUETTA: Six people of Hazara community, who were shot dead on Monday, were buried in their ancestral graveyards on Tuesday.

The funeral prayers of four victims were offered in Hazara graveyard in Eastern-Bypass and two in a graveyard near Alamdar Road. Score of religious scholars and leaders of the Hazara Democratic Party (HDP) participated in the funeral prayers.

Six people were killed and three others were injured when a group of armed men opened fire on a cobblers shop on Prince Road. All the victims were shoemakers. The banned outfit Lashkar-e-Jhangvi claimed the responsibility of the killings. Talking to the media, Shia Conference President Ashraf Zaidi said the government was not serious in arresting the culprits behind the killings of Hazara community members. Stringent security measures have been adopted in Quetta with the deployment of security forces and police to maintain public order. Most of the shops on Prince Road remained closed to mourn the death of innocent people.

Seven police officials, including an inspector, have been suspended following the directives of Balochistan Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani. Police have conducted raids in different parts of Quetta and detained dozens of suspects for interrogation. Three separate teams of CID, investigation and district police were constituted to investigate the killings.

HDP Chairman Abdul Khaliq Hazara announced that Hazara community will hold protest demonstrations outside foreign missions besides registering their protest with International Human Rights Organisation to highlight the incessant killings of Hazara community in Quetta.

Daily Times

Sectarian killing: Hazara community seeks to make protest heard internationally

By Our Correspondent
Published: April 10, 2012

Hazara Democratic Party to hold protests outside several embassies against targeted killings. PHOTO: REUTERS/ FILE

QUETTA: The Hazara Democratic Party (HDP) announced that the Hazara community will hold protest demonstrations outside the embassies of European, Asian countries, America, Australia and United Nations offices against targeted killings.

Chairman HDP Abdul Khaliq Hazara announced during a news conference on Tuesday that the protests will also be registered with International Human Rights Organisation to highlight the rampant targeted killings of the Hazara community in Quetta.

“This decade was really painful for the Hazara community during which hundreds of Hazara tribesmen were killed in incidents of targeted killings and suicide attacks,” he told reporters. Khaliq was accompanied by his party leaders among other activists.

Ironically there has been no progress in investigation nor any culprit brought to justice, Khaliq said adding that inaction on the part of government and its law enforcment agencies affirm the notion that they were patronising the culprits.

“Six labourers were brutally killed on the busy Prince Road on Monday night which shows the lawlessness and utter apathy of the government. I believe no religion allows such inhumane act.
“The Members of Provincial Assembly do not even have time to condemn these killings. The chief minister is running affairs of Balochistan from Islamabad which reflects his sincerity with the suffering people of his province have to bear,” he added.

The HDP announced that they will register their protest with the international community since the provincial and federal governments have failed to curb the unending targeted killings of the Hazara community and had given a free hand to criminals.

The HDP will stage protest demonstrations in front of embassies of Asian, European Countries, America, Australia and United Nations from April 20 to 30. The Hazara community residing abroad will also register their protest with International Human Rights Organisations.

The party also announced to stage a sit-in outside the Governor House and Chief Minister’s Secretariat and convene an All Parties Conference on April 15, inviting all political and nationalist parties to evolve a strategy on a future course of action.

“The province is on the brink of civil war; all the parties and responsible people have to show sincerity, otherwise the ongoing unrest will result in an unexpected crisis or a civil war,” the leaders of the Hazara community warned.

Express Tribune