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.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Protecting Hazaras in Balochistan


From the Newspaper |

EIGHT more people belonging to the Hazara Shia community were killed in Quetta on April 14 as the targeted killing of the ethnic community has unfortunately become a routine in the provincial capital.

These targeted killings indicate a great failure of law-enforcement agencies in Balochistan. Every time after completing their nefarious design the militants have been able to walk away freely and the perpetrators of such organised crime remain untouched.

Human rights groups have urged Pakistani security forces to take action against extremist sectarian outfits which have once again targeted Hazara Shia Muslims killing eight more people.

Human Rights Watch says that from 2008 to 2011 at least 275 Shias, mostly from the Hazara community, have been killed in Balochistan province, while these killings are still continued.

Human Rights Watch has reported that Pakistani and international human rights organisations, including HRW, have made numerous calls to Pakistan’s authorities to hold those responsible for the attacks to account. While authorities claim to have arrested dozens of suspects, no one has been charged in these attacks.

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has reported that “together with the red tape, endemic to the bureaucracy, the delays in justice delivery and the ban on political activity created a vacuum in which the Islamic militant groups found it easy to run their terror activities”.

The Asian Human Rights Commission has urged that the government must immediately avail itself of all possible efforts to bring the perpetrators of targeted killings of innocent Shias to book. The government must probe the links between the banned militant organisations and the establishment.

The AHRC has also urged the government to ensure the security of the survivors, family members and relatives of those who were killed in the targeted killings and immediately pay compensation and rehabilitate them.

Amnesty International’s Asia-Pacific director Sam Zarifi said: “These are not random killings but demonstrate the deliberate targeting of the Shia by armed groups.”

He added that “recent attacks have predominantly targeted unarmed Shia Muslims in their homes, shops or while travelling, and even in their places of worship.”

Amnesty International has also reported that Lashkar-i-Jhangvi, a banned militant organisation, is operating openly in Punjab and striking their victims at will in Balochistan and other parts of the country.

Human Rights Watch has also mentioned that Laskar-i-Jhangvi operates with impunity even in areas where state authority is well-established, such as Punjab and Karachi.

Human Rights Watch has urged the Pakistan government to direct the military and the Frontier Corps to protect those facing attacks from extremist groups.

IRFAN HUSSAIN
London

Urdu; Racial hatred, Sectarian Divide and Genocide of Hazaras

(Though most of the column is based on the writer's perceptions rather than history but it is worth to learn the perception of a non-Hazara who has lived for 20 years in the city and served in civil service...) 


Monday, April 16, 2012

Women Protest in Hazara Town against Target Killings


Pakistan's Worsening Hazara Crisis

The Governor of Pakistan's lawless Balochistan province says the Army may be summoned in the provincial capital city, Quetta, after a dramatic escalation in ethnic and sectarian violence. Zulfiqar Ali Magsi, the Governor, has strongly criticized the provincial government and suggested it to resign from the office due to its stark failure to curb thedeadly wave of violence targeting the Shia, Hazara minority community. If not immediately contained, the governor fears, this spate of violence may push the gas-rich region bordering Iran-Afghanistan into a state of civil war...Continue Reading...

Sectarian violence: Another Hazara shot dead, six escape separate attack

By Shehzad Baloch
Published: April 16, 2012

QUETTA: The security plan devised by the Government of Balochistan to target terrorists fanning sectarian violence in Quetta appears to have failed as yet another man belonging to the Hazara community was gunned down in broad daylight on Quarry Road, while six others escaped unhurt in a separate attack on Spinny Road.

Salman Ali, an elderly man, was sitting at a tyre shop when two assailants on a motorbike appeared and shot him in the head and chest. The attackers fled from the scene after the incident. The police reached the site and took the body to Provincial Sandeman Hospital.

Police termed the killing a case of sectarian targeted killing saying the victim was Hazara and a resident of Marriabad, a neighbourhood of the Shia community.

The incident triggered panic and most of the shops and markets on Quarry Road, Prince Road, Mezan Chowk and Liaquat Bazaar were closed.

The police and traffic police deputed in these areas were seen advising the people to go home by saying the situation had gone worse again.

The killing was reported in the heart of the city where a heavy contingent of police, Frontier Corps (FC) and other law enforcement agencies were deployed a few days ago following the targeted killings of six people on Monday.

A few hours earlier, members of the Hazara community in a yellow cab escaped unhurt when a group of armed men opened fire at them on Spinny Road.

“The people were on their way to Marriabad from the Hazara town when they were attacked by armed men. However, the people escaped unhurt in the attack,” Shia Conference stated in its statement to condemn the killings.

“It is ironic that the chief minister chaired a high-level meeting with the participation of high officials of law enforcement agencies and very next day, killing of innocent people resumed,” the Shia leaders said.

A number of Hazara people blocked the highway on Western Bypass to condemn the previous targeted killings. They raised slogans against the government and law enforcement agencies for their failure to break up the chain of target killers.

“The inaction on the part of law enforcement agencies is raising questions on their sincerity to protect the Hazara community,” Muhammad Ali, a young protestor said, adding that the Hazara community is peaceful in Quetta but they are being pushed against the wall.

Angry protestors also burnt tyres at Mezan Chowk and on Alamdar Road to register their protest.



Chief Minister Balochistan Nawab Aslam Raisani returned to Islamabad after chairing a high-level meeting pertaining to the law and order situation in Quetta.

Banned outfit Lashkar-i-Jhangvi (LJ) claimed responsibility for the targeted killings of Hazara community.

The spokesperson of LJ who introduced himself as Ali Shair Haideri told local media in Quetta that his organisation carried out targeted attacks on Quarry Road and Spinny Road. Talking from specified location, he said his organisation will continue its attacks in the future.

Quetta firing; Target Killings of Hazaras continues

Capital talk - Special episode - 16th april 2012 part 1

Hazara killings


From the Newspaper

YET another series of attacks against the Shia Hazara community in Balochistan over the weekend has raised fresh questions about the state’s inability or, as some quarters darkly suggest, unwillingness to take on the sectarian killers in the province headlined by the Lashkar-i-Jhangvi Balochistan. To be sure, with only a small number of hardcore militants believed to be involved, stopping them will not be easy. But there are disturbing signs that the killings are yet to shake the political and security apparatus in Balochistan out of its stupor. Even more problematically, members of the provincial government are being accused by the Hazara community of either providing sanctuary to the killers or of turning a blind eye to their presence in certain areas.

What is clear is that Balochistan has a growing problem of radicalisation. A network of madressahs and mosques has mushroomed in Baloch areas like the districts of Mastung, Khuzdar, Noshki and Kalat. With little to no oversight of their operations, the network has injected into parts of the Baloch population a growing intolerance along sectarian, i.e. Sunni-Shia, lines. Add to that mixture the recruiting of LJ type militant outfits and a relatively small problem can snowball. In Balochistan, the surge in targeting the Hazara community this year and particularly in the last few weeks is not well understood. It could be that a ‘deadline’ for the Hazaras to leave Quetta, for example, set by the militants has expired. Or with the space for sectarian attacks in other parts of the country somewhat reduced, the Hazaras in lawless Balochistan are an easier target.

Whatever the reasons for the surge in killings and attacks, the matter seems to be beyond the control of regular law-enforcement agencies. Police in Quetta are themselves targets of sectarian killers and do not have the resources to fight back or defend themselves. And if the police’s political bosses in the provincial government are disinclined to take on the sectarian militants, there’s little the police can do anyway. Which leaves the intelligence apparatus. The LJ in Balochistan is precisely the kind of entity that intelligence agencies are meant to track and help dismantle. The damaging war against Baloch separatists being led by the intelligence agencies is real enough but it’s not reason enough to preclude other actions by those agencies. But what if the agencies see strategic reasons to leave some groups untouched? The Hazaras of Balochistan are truly caught between a rock and a hard place.

SMS from Quetta


Mansoor Ali Khan on 16, Apr 2012




“Important, I can provide you information about latest attack on Brewery Road, Quetta but I demand full secrecy.” This is the message I received on my cell phone today when I reached office. I called up the number. It was a student from a college in Quetta. His voice shaking with fear. My first question was where did he get my number from? He replied, I got it from your face book account. He said he had seen the people carrying weapons from his hostel which is situated on Brewery Road. The student replied, he was not willing to reveal his identity or talk on-air because he feared for his life. I told him I cant help him until I don’t confirm his identity but he was insistent on hiding his identity. I didn’t force him anymore cause I knew his life was much precious than anything in this world. I simply let him go but told him to contact me again if he wants to share anything else.

This is only one example of thousands of citizens of Quetta who are living in fear for the last 15 days now. Every day we recieve news of unknown gunmen coming on motorbikes and shedding bullets on innocent people who are either sitting at their shops or are waiting for the bus at the bus-stop. Immigration consultants have thriving business in this city where every week hundreds of families are applying for immigrations to Canada, Australia or America. I personally know at least five such families who have sold every thing they ever owned, who have left their ancestors’ graves in this city due to the fear of their lives. I had a chance to talk to one such family in Canada. I asked them do they miss Quetta and they replied the only thing they miss about this city is that they would never be able to see the graves of their ancestors anymore. My next question was if they would ever return to the city, their answer was quick “No” and a long silence.

What could one say about a province whose governor has been compelled to say that if things don’t work out soon enough, civil war might erupt in this region. Our channel talked to the Secretary Interior of Baluchistan, Naseeb Ullah Bazai, and asked him why the law-enforcing agencies seemed to be failing. He replied they are trying their best to control the situation but his reply sounded more like a warrior who is fighting a war without arms. He gave us figures of arrests, figures of under-trial detainees but nowhere did he mention a concrete plan to handle this situation. The only thing he had to announce was that they are holding another ‘meeting’ to assess the situation.

In any other country if such a situation had come-up the Prime Minister would have been forced to move to the city to handle the situation but our Prime Minister seems too busy handling the contempt of court case against him, the new drug scandal against his son and yes, last but not the least increasing the number of ministers in the cabinet.

The Hazara community’s prominent representative in the National Assembly, Syed Nasir Ali, belongs to the ruling People’s party and is on a token strike for quite some time now but just like the people of Quetta, his token strike is apparently doing no good. I called the Secretary General of the Hazara Democratic Party, Ahmed Kuzak and told him about the sms I had received but I was shocked to see that he wasn’t surprised. He said we already know that there are elements in the city that are at play here, but the government machinery seems to have failed miserably. He told me that since March 26, 27 people, from the Hazara community have been shot dead in target killings. The attackers have been so confident about their approach that they are targeting people on two different spots in an interval of 5 minutes and no one from the police or the law-enforcing agencies seemed to get a clue about what is happening. Kuzak further stated that after the Mastung incident when 22 pilgrims who were on their way to Iran were brutally killed; there was a grave silence in the target killing incidents but since March 26 there has been a new wave seizing the city. The secretary general further mentioned that Quetta has become such sensitive area for policing that 27 posts of SPs and DSPs are lying vacant in the province since last year but no police officer is willing to take up the charge.

The political leadership, the police and even the clerics seemed to have failed in ensuring peace in this region. If things don’t work out soon enough, no laptops, Tsunamis, or Pakistan Khappay slogans will be able to the stop this wave of anger and sorrow and all that will be left for us do is to appoint another Hamood-ur-Rehman commission.

EDITORIAL: Hazara community’s sorrows

With eight more Hazara community members killed in Quetta on Saturday, the litany of the sorrows of the community seems unrelenting. In one incident, assailants ambushed a taxi on Brewery Road, killing the six occupants, in an eerie repeat of an earlier such ambush on a vehicle carrying Hazara community members. Minutes after the first incident, the assassins killed another two members of the community in a rickshaw in the same area. Virtual riots broke out in the city in reaction, with arson and violence on display against the police and authorities. The sky was punctuated by aerial firing, which wounded a student. The authorities responded by deploying the police as usual and calling in 10 more Frontier Corps (FC) platoons to beef up the security presence. That may have helped defuse the immediate violent reaction, but whether this post-facto response is the answer to what is by now clearly a pattern of attacks on the Hazara community is shrouded in doubt. Quetta in particular has become the theatre of this sectarian genocide. It must be stopped before the peaceful Hazara community loses patience and decides to protect and defend itself against the sectarian terrorists by force of arms, given that the Balochistan government and the FC have signally failed to do their duty. The ‘absent’ Chief Minister Aslam Raisani made the ritual announcement of doing all within the government’s power to bring the sectarian mayhem to an end. Balochistan Home Secretary Nasibullah Bazai offered a mealy-mouthed response, saying the government could not provide complete security to citizens. Let alone “complete” security, what security has the provincial government provided to any citizen? He goes on to assert that a comprehensive security plan has been devised that would be implemented after approval by the higher authorities. Nobody takes these ‘declarations’ seriously any more. Amidst the announcement of days of mourning, the Shia community in Quetta has called for the inept Balochistan government’s resignation. Governor Balochistan Zulfikar Magsi, a frequent critic of the provincial government’s (lack of) performance, warned the other day that if the provincial authorities could not handle the situation, the army may have to be called out. What would remain of the tattered credibility of the provincial government if this were to come to pass?

The Shia community is under attack in the country from Khurram Agency to Gilgit-Baltistan to Balochistan. The sectarian terrorists aligned with the Taliban and al Qaeda are seeking to sow the seeds of sectarian strife to such an extent throughout the country, from north to south, that a sectarian civil war breaks out to destabilise the country as a whole. While the Shia tribes in Khurram Agency are under the pressure of the Taliban and their mentors the intelligence agencies to allow safe passage to the Taliban for attacks in Afghanistan on pain of death, the Shias of Gilgit-Baltistan are being massacred without let or hindrance. Federal Interior Minister Rehman Malik’s proposal of a judicial commission on the sectarian violence in Gilgit-Baltistan is a non sequitur. It does not take a judicial commission to know the facts on the ground when Shias are picked off en masse every other day. Protests of solidarity with the Hazara community in Balochistan and Shias throughout the country were held on Saturday in Islamabad and even Washington. The purpose of the sectarian terrorists should leave no one in any doubt. Pakistan is to be reduced to rubble through a sectarian civil war that could destroy democracy and the country itself. They must not be allowed to succeed in their nefarious designs by pussyfooting authorities or inept law enforcement. It is in the interests of the system and all governments, federal and provincial, to rise to the challenge and conduct an effective campaign of suppression against these mad fanatics. *

They open a new front in Quetta

THE incidents in Quetta, killing eight members of Shia Hazara community Saturday shocked people across the country and resulted in a strong reaction from the affected sect forcing the administration to call in Frontier Corps troops to maintain law and order. This type of sectarian infighting if allowed to go on unchecked, would be a severe blow to the very unity and survival of Pakistan.

Balochistan in general and Quetta in particular has become a den of criminal gangs as every day there are incidents of target killings. This was the fourth attack against the members of Hazara community in a week while twenty six people have been killed in the past fortnight. The two separateincidents Saturday were the handiwork of organised gangs and there should be no doubt in any body’s mind that it is a well orchestrated conspiracy by foreign powers to create ethnic and sectarian hatred in a strategically important part of the country. The attacks by unidentified armed men are being carried out by the locals but it is for certain that they are being trained and financed by the enemies of the country who according to analysts want to send a clear message to the Pakistani leadership to either tow their line or face serious consequences. We say so because Sunnis and Shias have been living together for centuries and barring some minor incidents, there had been complete unity in their ranks. The sudden spur in target killings indicates that there is no writ of the provincial government and law enforcement agencies have no capacity to deal with the alarming situation. Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry during hearing of the law and order situation case in Quetta lamented that none of the authorities are concerned with the deteriorating law and order situation in Balochistan. What is more astonishing is that the huge Provincial Cabinet, a great burden on the exchequer, seems to be least perturbed over the killings. Some of the Ministers are accused of involvement in kidnappings and killings and the Chief Minister, who appears to be only interested in enjoying the perks and privileges, has no control over the Cabinet and the administration. A day earlier Governor Zulfikar Magsi warned that if peace was not restored in Quetta there was danger of civil war and the army might take over which would further mess up the situation. We are of the considered opinion that now that inimical foreign powers have opened a new front in Quetta to create sectarian disharmony and pitch one sect against the other, and the provincial government has totally failed, there is no other way out but to impose Governor rule to deal with the anti state elements with an iron hand to restore peace and order.

Mourning continues in Quetta over Hazara killings

DAWN.COM



Supporters of Hazara community gather near burning tyres as they are protesting against brewery road incident in Quetta on Sunday, April 15, 2012. (Arsalan Naseer/PPI Images).

QUETTA: Mourning against the targeted killings in Quetta continued for the third day on Monday, and members of the ethnic Hazara community continued their protests against the worsening law and order situation, DawnNews reported.

Earlier on Sunday, a high-level meeting on the province’s security situation chaired by Chief Minister Aslam Raisani decided to conduct targeted operations.

During the meeting, the authorities approved a new security plan for Quetta.

Under this plan, a ban on pillion-riding has been extended for two months whereas a ban on display of weapons is being maintained.

The FC and police personnel have been directed to take indiscriminate action against vehicles with tinted windows and personalised number plates.

Furthermore, the Balochistan government has announced to hand out Rs 400,000 to the heirs of each target killing victim and Rs 100,000 for each person injured as compensation. After the decision to conduct targeted operations and to take indiscriminate action against criminal elements, the police conducted raids in various localities of Quetta and arrested many suspects.

A few hours after the decision was taken, two persons were killed near Bakra Piri by unknown pillion-riding gunmen. One of the slain was identified as Abdul Ghani whereas the second person had not yet been identified.

Earlier, the Hazara Democratic Party had rejected the chief minister’s invitation for talks and the party’s provincial chairman Abdul Khaliq Hazara said that the provincial government had failed to control the law and order situation.

Also, a complete shut down had been observed in the provincial capital on Sunday.

Quetta braces for targeted operation

By: Bari Baloch | April 16, 2012 |



QUETTA - Following the rise in the incidents of sectarian killings, the Balochistan Government has decided to start targeted action against the terrorists creating law and order problem, particularly stoking sectarian violence in the province by attacking people belonging to Hazara community of Shia Muslims.

This was decided on Sunday during a high-level meeting specially convened to review the law and order situation in Quetta after frequent incidents of sectarian killings, chaired by Chief Minister Balochistan Nawab Aslam Raisani.

Provincial Home Minister Zafarullah Zehri, Ali Madad Jattak, Home Secretary Nasebullah Bazai, Inspector General Police Rao Amin Muhammad Hashim, leaders of Shia Conference, Hazara community and religious leaders and representatives of law-enforcement agencies attended the meeting.

Raisani once again blamed the foreign elements for recent killings and acts of terrorism in Quetta and urged the religious scholars and political leaders to maintain unity and harmony to foil this conspiracy.

The meeting approved a comprehensive and long lasting security plan under which targeted operation will be launched against terrorists fanning sectarian violence and involved in other heinous crimes taking place in Quetta.

The meeting decided to constitute committees comprising legislators that will monitor the implementation of security plan and coordinate with the law- enforcement agencies.

Home Secretary Nasebullah Bazai informed meeting that Quetta city will be divided into 20 sectors and details of police check posts, pickets and patrolling teams have already been sought for this purpose.

Separate Committees were formed by Home Ministry to monitor the situation on a daily basis and keep a close eye on duty police officers.

‘Departmental action will take place against the police officials if they found negligence from the duties or any untoward incident took place in their jurisdiction’, he told the participants.

The government will set up scanner gates on the highways leading to Quetta city while the check posts of Frontier Corps (FC), police and Balochistan Levies will be established on other routes, he said.

As many as 250 Close Circuit Cameras will be installed in Quetta city while police and Balochistan Levies will be provided with sophisticated weapons and facilities of transportation and communication, Home Secretary informed the Chief Minister.

He said these measures will help the law-enforcement agencies to overcome the menace of targeted killings and sectarian violence. Senior official of Frontier Corps (FC) assured complete backup for police and Balochistan Levies when needed.

It has been decided during the meeting that law-enforcement agencies will proceed against the criminals and take stern action rather than adopting defensive strategy.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Agenda 360 15th April 2012 Part 2

Agar 15th April 2012 part 1

Strike in Quetta, life comes to a standstill

DAWN.COM



Security official stand alert to avoid any untoward incident as violence erupts in city after incidents of target-killings in Quetta. —(Arsalan Naseer/PPI Images).

QUETTA: Life came to a standstill as a wheel-jam and shutter down strike continues in the city on the call given by the Hazara Democratic Party and the Balochistan Shia conference over the killing of 9 members of the Shia Hazara community in the city on Saturday, DawnNews reported.

Shops and markets were shut all across the city and traffic vanished from the roads as the city wore a deserted look.

The call for strike was supported by various other parties in the province who also demanded for Governor’s rule to be imposed over the province.

Provincial Governor Nawab Zulfiqar Ali Magsi ordered an immediate crack-down against terrorists.

The Chief Minister of Balochistan Nawab Aslab Raisani called for a high level meeting regarding the law and order situation of the province which would be attended by both shia and sunni clerics.

Lawlessness and target killings have become a routine in Quetta due to which businesses in the provincial capital are suffering from stagnation as the day to day deteriorating law and order situation and strikes are causing losses worth millions of rupees

Security is essential for trade and businesses to flourish but it remains only a dream for the residents of Balochistan especially in its provincial capital city of Quetta.

Though people from all walks of life are affected by the strikes but it’s the daily wage earners who suffer the most. Daily producers of perishable items usually have to suffer more losses as their products are not sold due to untimely closure of business in the largest but least developed province of the country.

Hazara Shia Target Killing Sawal Hai Pakistan ka [Aaj Tv)

Hazara killings: Condemnation, mourning and anger

Nitin Pai: Put Pakistan on a genocide watchlist

Nitin Pai / Apr 16, 2012, 00:36 IST

Earlier this month, provoked by a grenade attack, hundreds of militants affiliated to radical Sunni groups stopped buses in Gilgit-Baltistan (a part of the erstwhile state of Jammu & Kashmir under Pakistani control), rounded up Shia passengers and executed them. Similar incidents in the region over the past few months have claimed scores of lives. We do not know how many exactly, because Pakistan has imposed a media blackout. It is already clear though, that the killings of Shias were systematic and carried out with the connivance of the Pakistani state authorities.

That’s not all. All of Pakistan’s religious and ethnic minorities are under attack.

While the lot of religious minorities in Pakistan was never pretty, it has gotten far worse in the last few years. The brazen, unpunished and celebrated assassinations of personalities like Salman Taseer and Shahbaz Bhatti divert attention from the violence against minorities on a day-to-day basis. There are reports of several dozen Pakistani Hindu families seeking asylum in India. Compiling figures from Sindhi language newspapers, Marvi Sirmed, a Pakistani writer and activist, has estimated that 3,000 Hindu girls have been abducted and converted to Islam in the province. Christian families have been forced to flee after charges of blasphemy were levelled against their members.

It’s a similar situation for ethnic minorities. In Balochistan, the Pakistan army’s counter-insurgency strategy includes terrorising the population through enforced disappearances, torture and killing of citizens followed by the dumping of their bodies as a warning to the rest. The Shia Hazaras are not only a religious minority, but also an ethnic one. Over the last two years there has been an escalation in violence against them in Balochistan, in FATA and Gilgit-Baltistan.

The perpetrators and immediate motives in each of these cases are different. They range from Sunni jihadi groups targeting people they consider apostates, to rival communities seeking domination, to the Pakistani armed forces fighting insurgents. They are called sectarian violence, gang warfare, ethnic cleansing, kill-and-dump or counter-insurgency. It is perhaps because there are individual names for these crimes that we are missing the possibility that they might amount to a bigger one — genocide.

This is not a word to be used loosely. Genocide specifically means “acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group”. It includes killing people on account of belonging to a group; causing them serious bodily or mental harm; deliberately inflicting conditions to destroy the group in whole or in part; preventing births and transferring children by force. The situation in Pakistan today satisfies many of these criteria, and to varying degrees.

How many people have died? The blackout, censorship and violent intimidation of journalists makes it hard to estimate even the order of magnitude. Baloch nationalist groups, for instance, have criticised the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan for reporting 35 disappearances and 173 dumped bodies in 2011. They claim over over 14,000 disappearances since 2005 and 400 dumped bodies since July 2010. It would be wrong, though, to wait for the body counts to rise to some arbitrary level for the world to take action.

A genocide takes place in stages. These can be rapid or drawn out in time. Gregory Stanton, an American human rights scholar and president of Genocide Watch, has identified eight stages, starting from classification of people into “us and them” and ending in extermination followed by denial. Pakistan is already through many of the early stages. Instead of waiting until it is too late for too many, the proper thing to do now is to squarely place Pakistan in a genocide watchlist and bring the intense focus of international public opinion to bear. It is understandable that the governments of the United States and India are unwilling to take up the violence against minorities for reasons of realpolitik. It is understandable that China and Saudi Arabia don’t care. It is therefore understandable that the UN Security Council doesn’t care. What is not understandable is that international media and human rights groups appear oblivious to this ongoing tragedy.

The Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect (GCR2P) and the International Coalition for The Responsibility to Protect (ICRtoP) — two prominent international NGOs that champion the Responsibility to Protect populations against mass atrocities as an international norm — do not even list Pakistan in the crises they are tracking. Organisations like Human Rights Watch are bravely reporting events on the ground, but their wide mandate precludes them from focusing on this one issue.

The UN Human Rights Council is more interested in outlawing giving offence to religion than killing in its name. The Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC), always ready to talk about the world’s oppressed Muslims, can be trusted to maintain a resolute silence in this case.

Closer home, the Indian media stands indicted too. So completely are our television channels beholden to the narrative of the peace process that they are, literally, overlooking mass murder.

The white stripe on Pakistan’s flag is being eaten up. The geopolitical implications come later. At this time it is already a human tragedy that is unconscionable for Indians to ignore. In Bob Dylan’s sublime words, “Yes, and how many deaths will it take till he knows/That too many people have died?”

The author is founder and fellow for geopolitics at the Takshashila Institution, an independent think tank on strategic affairs

Targeted operation against culprits to be launched in Quetta


DAWN.COM |




Chief Minister of Balochistan Aslami Raisani – APP (File Photo)

QUETTA: The Chief Minister of Balochistan Aslam Raisani said on Sunday that the government will launch a targeted operation in Quetta for the restoration of peace in the city, DawnNews reported.

After a fresh wave of ethnic and sectarian killings in Quetta, Raisani made the immediate decision in a high level meeting with the Provincial Home Minister Zafarullah Zahri, Ali Madad Jatak, religious leaders and representatives of law enforcement agencies.

Raisani was also briefed about the Quetta’s situation. Raisani said that the police department will be restructured and non-discriminate measures will be taken against culprits and target killers in the city

Hazara killings: Complete strike observed in Quetta


By Shehzad Baloch
Published: April 15, 2012


Police and security forces also booked over 200 people for violating the ban on pillion riding in the city. PHOTO: PPI/ FILE

QUETTA: A complete shutter down and wheel-jam strike was observed in the provincial capital, paralysing the business activities on Sunday.

Stringent security measures were taken to maintain law and order, with the deployment of paramilitary troops Frontier Corps (FC), police and other law enforcing agencies in and around Quetta.

The strike was called by the Hazara Democratic Party (HDP) and was backed by the Balochistan National Party (BNP) and Jamiat-i-Ulema Islam-Fazal (JUI-F) to protest against the recent wave of sectarian targeted killings that left 18 killed in the last four days.

All the shops, markets, eateries and even chemists shops in Liaquat Bazar, Mezan Chowk, Abdul Sattar Road, Prince Road, Jinnah Road, Zarghoon Road, Brewery Road, Hazara Town and Marriabad remained closed.

The strike was observed partially in Saryab and the nearby areas as markets and shops were functional as usual.

It is pertinent to mention that half of the business community in Quetta observe weekly holiday on Friday while remaining shut their businesses on Sunday.

Police and security forces also booked over 200 people for violating the ban on pillion riding in the city.

Security personnel increased their patrolling in Quetta to restore order. However, panic and fear continued to plague the city as people preferred to stay indoors and most of the streets and roads presented a deserted look, with very thin traffic plying on the roads.

Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani presided over a high level meeting to review the law and order situation in the aftermath of targeted killings of Hazara community members.

Provincial Ministers, Inspector General Police (IG) Balochistan, Home Secretary and other senior officials attended the meeting, which was convened to devise a strategy to deal with the situation. The meeting was underway when this report was filed.

The HDP Chief Abdul Khaliq Hazara in his statement said his community was being compelled to pick up arms to protect its members from the targeted attacks.




The Express Tribune

Saturday, April 14, 2012

15-day toll rises to 26; strike call for today: Eight Hazaras shot dead in Quetta

From the Newspaper | Saleem Shahid |

QUETTA, April 14: At least eight members of the Shia Hazara community and a policeman were killed in three attacks here on Saturday.

After the attacks and subsequent violence, the administration called out Frontier Corps in the city. The paramilitaries started taking up positions at important places in the evening.

“Seven people were killed in firing on two vehicles on Brewery Road and Subzal Road,” DIG (Operation) Qazi Wahid told Dawn.
Saturday’s killings took the number of Hazara Shias killed in Quetta and its vicinity during the past fortnight to 26.

The Hazara Democratic Party has called upon the community to observe a strike on Sunday to “register outrage over the unabated killings”.

Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani, who was in Islamabad, expressed sorrow over the deaths and ordered officials concerned to “take all possible steps for arresting the culprits”.

The Balochistan governor had earlier this week criticised the provincial government, warning that the army could be called out if the administration failed to protect life and property.

Soon after Saturday’s attacks, angry protesters blocked the road that leads from Quetta to Hazara town.

They torched a private van and a motorcycle in Bolan Medical College Hospital.

A student was injured when unknown people fired in the air. Shots were fired at police, too.

The protesters also burnt tyres at different points in Quetta and some men riding motorcycles fired blank shots, triggering panic.

Shops and business centres were closed and people started rushing home as fear overtook the city after masked men riding motorcycles fired indiscriminately in shopping areas.

The terrorists first struck at Killi Ibrahimzai, where four motorcyclists fired at a yellow cab that was taking six people to Quetta from Hazara town.

“They opened fire on the car from two directions, killing all the six passengers. They suffered bullet wounds to their heads,” police said.

In the other shooting, two men riding a motorcycle attacked another vehicle on Subzal Road.

One man was killed on the spot and another was critically injured. He died in the Combined Military Hospital.

A policeman, Mohammad Panha, was shot dead in Shalkot, near Quetta, when he was going to his place of duty.

According to some TV reports, some suspects were taken into custody.

OUTRAGE:
                
 Members of the Hazara community converged on Brewery Road in their hundreds and at the Bolan Medical College Hospital, where bodies were placed for identification. The enraged crowd pelted vehicles with stones and blocked roads.

The demonstrators set on fire a van and a motorcycle parked in the hospital and also attacked some shops.

Groups of protesters burnt tyres at Meezan Chowk and in some other places across the Balochistan capital.

However, security personnel dispersed them after firing shots in the air.

Home Secretary Naseebullah Bazai immediately called out the Frontier Corps to control the situation.

“Ten FC battalions have been deployed in and around Quetta to restore peace and order,” official sources said.

Heavy contingents of FC, police and Balochistan Constabulary patrolled the road and streets of the provincial capital.

Civil society protests Quetta killings



* Asks CJP to take suo motu notice of genocide at hands of terrorists

Staff Report

ISLAMABAD: Scores of activists belonging to Hazara Youth Islamabad and Baloch Friends on Saturday staged a protest demonstration in front of the National Press Club demanding the chief justice of Pakistan to take notice of ongoing genocide of the Hazara community.

Holding placards and banners inscribed with denunciation of Saturday’s killing in which at least seven people were shot dead in Quetta, the protesters demanded the government protect the community from target killers.

They also raised slogans against the government and law enforcement agencies’ inaction towards incidents of targeted killings in Quetta.

Addressing the participants, social activists Marvi Sirmed, Dr Farzana Bari and Workers Party leader Dr Asim Sajjad called upon Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry to take suo motu notice of the deteriorating law and order situation in Quetta, particularly killings of Hazara people on sectarian basis. “People have pinned high hopes on the chief justice that he will provide us with justice,” they said.

“Since 1999, over 700 people of the community have been killed in different incidents of target killings and suicide attacks while there has been no progress against the culprits which strengthens the notion the government and law enforcement agencies are patronising the terrorists,” they said.

Social workers lamented that parliamentarians did not even have time to condemn these killings while the provincial government was also reluctant to take action against criminals.

They further said that history witnessed that Hazara community, comprising half a million peace-loving people, has no difference with other sects. However, for being peaceful, the community members are being victimised and killed by terrorists. “We believe no religion allows such inhumane act,” they maintained.

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

However, the activists also appealed to all peace-loving citizens of the Pakistan, civil society, media, international NGOs, and law enforcement agencies to condemn systematic genocide of the community and start a crackdown against banned organisations to the save the province from an expected civil war.

They said that the province was 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.

Daily Times

Lekin - 14th April 2012

کوئٹہ: ہلاک ہونے والوں کی تعداد نو ہو گئی


آخری وقت اشاعت: اتوار 15 اپريل 2012 ,‭ 19:52 GMT 00:52 PST


بلوچستان کے دارالحکومت کوئٹہ میں سنیچر کے فائرنگ کے واقعات میں ہلاک ہونے والوں کی تعداد نو ہوگئی۔ دوسری جانب وزیراعلیٰ بلوچستان نے کوئٹہ میں قیام امن کے لیے اتوار کو علماء کا اجلاس طلب کرلیا ہے اور زاہرین کے تحفظ کے لیے سیکورٹی کے انتظامات مذید سخت کردیے گئے ہیں۔۔

کوئٹہ میں سنیچر کے روز فائرنگ کے واقعات میں زخمی ہونے والا ایک اور نوجوان زخموں کی تاب نہ لاتے ہوئے ہسپتال میں چل بسا جس سے ہلاکتوں کی تعداد نو تک پہنچ گئی جن میں سے آٹھ کا تعلق شیعہ مسلک اور ہزارہ قبیلے سے تھا۔

فائرنگ کے ان واقعات کےبعد کوئٹہ شہر میں دن بھر حالات کشیدہ رہے جس پرقابو پانے کے لیے حکومت نے فرنٹئیرکور کی دس پلاٹون طلب کر لی تھیں۔

دوسری جانب صوبائی سیکرٹری داخلہ نصیب اللہ بازئی کی صدارت میں ایک اہم اجلاس ہوا۔جس میں فیصلہ کیاگیا کہ کوئٹہ شہر میں قیام امن کے لیے دوسرے اضلاع سے دوسو اہلکار طلب کیے جائیں گے۔اس کے علاوہ ایران جانے والے زائرین پر حملوں کا خدشتہ ظاہرکیا گیا ہے۔
اس سلسلے میں ضلع کوئٹہ، مستونگ، نوشکی اور چاغی کے ڈپٹی کمشنروں کوہدایت کی گئی ہے کہ وہ فرقہ وارانہ دہشت گردی کی روک تھام کےلیے زائرین کی حفاظت کے لیے مزید سخت اقدامات کریں۔

وزارت داخلہ کے ذرائع کے مطابق وزیراعلیٰ بلوچستان نواب اسلم رئیسانی نے آج کوئٹہ میں ایک اعلیٰ سطحی اجلاس طلب کیا ہے جس میں آئی جی ایف سی اور آئی جی پولیس سمیت دیگرمتعلقہ حکام شرکت کریں گے۔جس کے بعد شیعہ سنی علماء کا اجلاس بھی ہوگا جس میں مذہبی بھائی چارے کو پروان چڑھانے اور امن کو یقینی بنانے کےلیے اہم فیصلے کیے جائیں گے۔

دوسری جانب شیعہ مسلک سے تعلق رکھنے والی مختلف تنظیموں نے ٹارگٹ کلنگ کے مسلسل واقعات کے خلاف اتوار کو کوئٹہ میں شٹرڈاؤن اور پہیہ جام ہڑتال کرنے کااعلان کیا ہے۔

ہزارہ قبیلے کی مختلف تنظیموں نے کوئٹہ میں ٹارگٹ کلنگ کی مذمت کرتے ہوئے صوبائی حکومت سے مستعفی ہونے اور گورنر راج نافذ کرنے کامطالبہ کیا ہے۔ انہوں نے خبردار کیا کہ آئندہ ایسے واقعات کے رونماء ہونے کے بعد جوکچھ ہوگا اس کی ذمہ داری حکومت پر عائد ہوگی۔ بقول ان کے سال دوہزار پانچ سے ٹارگٹ کلنگ میں اب تک ہزارہ قبیلے سے تعلق رکھنے والے چھ سوساٹھ افراد ہلاک جبکہ اس سے زیادہ زخمی ہوئے ہیں۔

یاد رہے کہ گزشتہ روز گورنر بلوچستان نواب ذوالفقار مگسی نے ایک اعلی سطحی اجلاس میں کوئٹہ شہر میں امن وامان کی صورتحال پر تشویش کااظہارکرتے ہوئے صوبائی حکومت کو سخت اقدامات کرنے کی ہدایت کی تھی۔

دوسری جانب ہزارہ قبیلے سے تعلق رکھنے والے سات افراد کو کوئٹہ کے ہزارہ ٹاؤن قبرستان میں سپردخاک کردیاگیا ہے۔

BBC URDU

Hazara Killing Report From Negaah TV Date 14 April 2012

In Session on Duniya News -- 14th Apr 2012 p1

In Session on Duniya News -- 14th Apr 2012 p2

In Session on Duniya News -- 14th Apr 2012 p3

In Session on Duniya News -- 14th Apr 2012 p4

QUETTA & PRESENT SITUATION



Aaj TV; Quetta Firing 9 killed

Brewery Road Quetta Tadfeen- Shia killing In Quetta -14april2012

کوئٹہ:ہزارہ ڈیموکریٹک پارٹی کی کل پہیہ جام ہڑتال کی کال




کوئٹہ… کوئٹہ میں آج صبح فائرنگ کے تین مختلف واقعات میں ایک پولیس اہلکار سمیت آٹھ افراد کو قتل کردیاگیا، واقعات کے بعد کوئٹہ شہر میں کشیدگی کی فضاء ہے اور ہزارہ ڈیموکریٹک پارٹی نے کل کوئٹہ شہر اور قومی شاہراہوں پر پہیہ جام ہڑتال کی کال دے دی۔ ٹارگٹ کلنگ کے ان تازہ واقعات کے بعد کوئٹہ شہر میں ایک بار پھر کشیدگی بڑھ گئی ، مشتعل افراد نے بی ایم سی اسپتال میں توڑ پھوڑکی اور وہاں کھڑی سرکاری گاڑی کوآگ لگادی اور بروری تھانہ کے سامنے احتجاجی دھرنا دیا اس دوران شہر میں اہم کاروباری مراکز اور دکانیں بند ہوگئیں۔ امن و امان کی صورتحال کے پیش نظر ایف سی کے دس پلاٹون کو طلب کرلیاگیا جبکہ پولیس اور اے ٹی ایف کی اضافی نفری بھی طلب کرلی گئی ، دوسری جانب ہزارہ ڈیموکریٹک پارٹی، پشتونخواہ ملی عوامی پارٹی اور عوامی نیشنل پارٹی سمیت مختلف سیاسی و مذہبی جماعتوں نے تشدد کے حالیہ واقعات کی مذمت کی ہے ،ان واقعات کے خلاف تحفظ عزاداری کونسل نے 7دن اوربلوچستان شیعہ کانفرنس نے 40روزہ سوگ کا اعلان کردیا اور ہزارہ ڈیموکریٹک پارٹی نے ان واقعات کے خلاف کل اتوار کو کوئٹہ شہر اور صوبے کی قومی شاہراہوں پر پہیہ جام ہڑتال کی کال بھی دی ہے،ان واقعات کے حوالے سے وزیراعلی بلوچستان کاکہناہے کہ یہ پولیس کی غفلت اورنا اہلی کا نتیجہ ہیں۔ انہوں نے کہا کہ ان واقعات میں ملوث ملزمان کیخلاف کارروائی کی جائے گی، دوسری جانب صوبائی سیکرٹری داخلہ نصیب اللہ بازئی نے جیو نیوز کو بتایا کہ ان واقعات کی روک تھام کے لئے نیا سکیورٹی پلان ترتیب دے دیا گیا ہے جس پر فوری عملدرآمدکیا جائے گا، ان کا یہ بھی کہنا تھا کہ ان کی صورتحال پر مکمل نظر ہے اور ٹارگٹ کلنگ کا ایک واقعہ بھی ناقابل قبول ہے۔
Geo TV

Gunmen target Hazara minority in Pakistan

At least seven people killed in latest attacks against mostly Shia ethnic group in southwestern city of Quetta.

Last Modified: 14 Apr 2012 09:54




Government inaction against the perpetrators in the face of rising violence has triggered protests [AFP]


Gunmen have killed at least seven people identified as Hazaras , a mostly Shia ethnic minority, in three separate attacks in southwest Pakistan, police said, bringing the two-week death toll to over 30 people.

Senior police officer Shaukat Ajmad said on Saturday that assailants riding on a motorcycle opened fire on six people in a taxi in Quetta, the capital of violence-ridden southwestern Balochistan province.

The men were rushed to the hospital but died of their injuries.

Minutes later, two people, including a police offier, were shot and killed in a rickshaw in the same area. The attackers managed to flee after the incident.

Targeted violence against Shias, particularly the Hazara minority, has been on the rise.

In the span of a week, gunmen have opened fire on a shoe store, a tea shop, and a juice stand, all at the heart of some of Quetta’s busiest areas.

The latest violence has triggered peaceful protests from the Hazara community, who accuse authorities of not doing enough to go after the perpetrators.

On Friday, the Hazara Democratic Party (HDP) held a protest of thousands in front of the provincial governor’s house.

Khaliq Hazara, the party’s leader, said the assailants have been emboldened by government inaction and were now carrying out attacks easily in the city’s busy markets.

Saleem Javed, a physician and blogger in Quetta who attended the rally, said the protesters called for action against Lashkar-e-Jangvi, an al-Qaeda-linked group which has taken responsibility for most of the targeted attacks.

“Lashkar-e-Jangvi operates from a particular area, we demanded a clamp down,” Javed told Al Jazeera. “We also asked for the federal government in Islamabad to take over the issue.”

As the governor’s staff promised the protesters that their demands would be met and requested them to leave, another Hazara - an elderly guard at a market - was shot dead.

Many of the shops and markets remained closed on Saturday, as the HDP called for a "complete shutdown".


هشت نفر در کویته پاکستان به ضرب گلوله کشته شدند


به روز شده: 09:08 گرينويچ - شنبه 14 آوريل 2012 - 26 فروردین 1391


پلیس در استان بلوچستان پاکستان می‌گوید افراد مسلح سوار بر موتور، هشت نفر را در شهر کویته به ضرب گلوله کشته‌اند.

گزارش‌ها حاکی از آن است که افرادی که هدف قرار گرفتند، از اقلیت شیعیان هزاره هستند.

بخش بزرگی از شهر در اعتراض به این واقعه تعطیل شده است.

خبرنگار بی بی سی در شهر کویته می‌گوید خشونت علیه شیعیان هزاره به شدت افزایش یافته و در دو هفته گذشته، حداقل ۲۵ نفر کشته شده‌اند.

کوئٹہ: فائرنگ کےمختلف واقعات میں آٹھ ہلاک



آخری وقت اشاعت:  ہفتہ 14 اپريل2012 ,‭ 06:52 GMT 11:52 PST
ان واقعات کے خلاف بلوچستان شیعہ کانفرنس نے سینچر کو شٹر ڈاؤن ہڑتال کی اپیل کی ہے۔
پاکستان کے صوبہ بلوچستان کے دارالحکومت کوئٹہ میں فائرنگ کے تین مختلف واقعات میں آٹھ افراد ہلا ک اور پانچ زخمی ہو گئے۔
ہلاک ہونے والوں میں سات کا تعلق ہزارہ قبیلے سے تھا۔
ہلاکتوں کے بعد مشتعل مظاہرین نے ایک گاڑی کو نذرِ آتش کردیا۔
کوئٹہ سے بی بی سی کے نامہ نگار ایوب ترین کے مطابق سنیچر کی صبح نامعلوم افراد نے ہزارہ ٹاؤن سے مری آباد کی جانب آنے والی ایک گاڑی پر فائرنگ کی جس کے نتیجے میں چھ افراد ہلاک اور تین زخمی ہو گئے جنہیں فوری طور پر بولان میڈیکل کمپلیکس پہنچایاگیا۔
اس واقعہ کے چند منٹ بعد نامعلوم افراد نے سبزل روڈ پر فائرنگ کی جس کے نتیجے میں ایک شخص ہلاک اور دو زخمی ہو گئے۔
شالکوٹ کے علاقے میں ایک موٹرسائیکل پر سوار دو افراد نے فائرنگ کر کے ایک پولیس اہلکار کو ہلا ک کردیا۔
فائرنگ کے ان واقعات کے بعد ہزار ہ قبیلے سے تعلق رکھنے افراد کی ایک بڑی تعداد بولان میڈیکل کمپلیکس ہسپتال پہنچ گئی جہاں مشتعل افراد نے توڑ پھور کی اور ایک گاڑی کو نذرِ آتش کردیا۔
پرنس روڈ پر نامعلوم افراد کی فائرنگ کے بعد کاروباری مراکز بند کر دیے گئے جبکہ تعلیمی اداروں میں طلباء و طالبات کو قبل از وقت چھٹی دے دی گئی۔
رواں برس انتیس مارچ سے اب تک ٹارگٹ کلنگ کے مختلف واقعات میں اٹھائیس افراد ہلاک ہوچکے ہیں جن میں سے پچیس کاتعلق شیعہ مسلک اور ہزارہ قبیلے سے تھا۔
ان واقعات کے خلاف بلوچستان شیعہ کانفرنس نے سینچر کو شٹر ڈاؤن ہڑتال کی اپیل کی ہے۔
گز شتہ روز گورنر بلوچستان نواب ذوالفقار مگسی نے ایک اعلٰی سطحی اجلاس میں کوئٹہ شہر میں امن وامان کی صورت حال پر تشویش کا اظہار کرتے ہوئے صوبائی حکومت کو سختی سے ہدایت کی تھی کہ امن وامان کو بہتر بنا نے کے لیے مزید موثراقدامات کیے جائیں۔
دوسری جانب وزیر اعلی بلوچستان نواب اسلم رئیسانی نے کوئٹہ میں ہزارہ قبیلے کے افراد کی مسلسل ہلاکتوں کانوٹس لیتے ہوئے فرنٹئیرکور کے مذید دس پلاٹون کو طلب کرلیا ہے۔

سانحہ بروری روڈ اور سبزل روڈ


BBC; Quetta Firing 6 Killed 2 Injured

BBC ; Quetta Firing 9 Killd 2 injured

Quetta is heading towards Civil war; Governor Magsi


Bolti Tasaveer; Raihana Lateef (Artist)

Bugti killing was solely Musharraf’s decision: Balochistan

By Our Correspondent
Published: April 14, 2012


The Balochistan government denies any role in the killing of Jamhoori Watan Party chief Nawab Akbar Bugti. PHOTO: FILE
ISLAMABAD:

The Balochistan government on Friday denied any role in the killing of Jamhoori Watan Party chief Nawab Akbar Bugti, saying the entire operation was carried out solely on the orders of then chief of army staff General Pervez Musharraf.

The denial is contained in written statements submitted to the apex court.

Advocate General of Balochistan Amanullah Kinrani informed the three-judge bench, headed by Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, that as per the civil administration’s affidavits, the authorities – which include the chief minister – were not taken on board about the decision.

The chief justice posed a few questions about evidence in the case and the number of accused involved, which the advocate general chose to duck, saying only that a charge-sheet has been produced before the court against Musharraf.

In the hearing on Balochistan’s law and order case, the provincial inspector general of police (IGP) was asked to appear before the court. However, when asked about the murder of three Hazaras in Quetta, he seemed clueless.

Justice Chaudhry expressed concern over the inefficacy of the police in curbing sectarian violence. Referring to the security cameras installed around the city, the chief justice asked, “Did you identify the culprits or make any arrests?”

The inspector general, however, informed the court that all 23 of the CCTV cameras installed in the city are ‘faulty’, to which the CJ retorted, “it is your responsibility to install quality cameras.”

The court directed the police official to stop the installation of such faulty cameras, which do not help in identifying the culprits.

‘Missing’ persons case

The IG informed the court that a missing person, Mazhar Khan Marri had returned home last night and presented a copy of his statement.

The court expressed concern over the kidnappings for ransom, saying it was the duty of the police to recover the abducted men.

The CJ directed the police to record the home minister’s statement regarding the alleged involvement of provincial ministers in kidnappings. “You should interrogate the suspected ministers.”

The court also directed the IG to produce three missing persons Dr Nasir Ahmad, Akhtar Lango and Abdul Hafeez Lodeeni on April 16 before the bench.

The IG said he could not promise the recovery of these people, but said he would try his best.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 14th, 2012.

8 killed in sectarian attack in Pakistan's Quetta

PTI | Apr 14, 2012, 12.43PM IST

ISLAMABAD: At least eight persons, including seven members of the minority Shia Hazara community and a policeman, were killed in three separate incidents of firing in Quetta city of southwest Pakistan on Saturday, officials said.

The first incident occurred on Brewery Road, where gunmen riding a motorcycle ambushed a taxi carrying members of the Hazara community.

Six persons were killed instantly. The attackers managed to escape, police and witnesses said.

In the second incident, gunmen fired at a group of people on Sabzal Road. A Hazara man was killed and another injured, police said.

In yet another incident, a police constable was gunned down in Shalkot area on the outskirts of Quetta, the capital of Balochistan province.

Quetta has been rocked by several incidents of sectarian violence this week.

Members of the Hazara community were the target in most of these incidents and over a dozen Shias have been killed.

Today's killings resulted in tension across Quetta and shops and commercial hubs were closed after the violence.

At some places, members of the Hazara community organised protests against the killings. Several cars were torched outside the hospital where the bodies were taken.

Protestors burnt tyres to block roads and fired in the air at some places. The Hazara Democratic Party called for a strike in Quetta.

Additional policemen and Frontier Corps personnel were deployed to restore peace in the city. Deputy Inspector General of Police Qazi Wahid described today's violence as incidents of "targeted sectarian killings".

Law enforcement personnel cordoned off several areas and launched a search operation to trace the attackers.

No let-up in violence: Governor fears Balochistan sliding into civil war

By Shehzad Baloch
Published: April 14, 2012


Protesters shout slogans during a rally in Quetta, against the killing of Hazara community members. Rallies were staged across the country against sectarian violence. PHOTO: AFP
QUETTA:

Incensed by the alarming rise in incidents of targeted killings, Balochistan Governor Zulfiqar Ali Magsi has said that if the security situation does not improve, a civil war may break out in the restive province.

“I don’t know what the government is doing? The situation is slipping out of control. Target killings are happening on a daily basis despite the presence of paramilitary Frontier Corps (FC), Balochistan Constabulary and police,” a visibly upset governor said during a meeting with a delegation of the Hazara Democratic Party (HDP).

“We will be compelled to call out Pakistan Army and FC in Quetta, if the government does not check incidents of target killings,” he said.

In recent months, there has been an alarming surge in target killings of ethnic Hazaras, who are Shias by sect, in Balochistan, Quetta in particular.

The HDP delegation met with Governor Magsi following a protest sit-in by Hazara community members outside the Governor House and Chief Minister Secretariat.

The delegation lodged a protest with the governor over targeted killings of Hazaras in Balochistan. The governor assured the delegation that he would take up the matter with Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani.

He also directed the authorities to launch an effective crackdown against the groups stoking sectarian violence in the province. “We have a huge cabinet and almost all provincial legislators are ministers – but they are least interested in maintaining law and order,” he added.

Earlier, hundreds of HDP activists staged a rally. They marched on different roads and thoroughfares of the city, chanting slogans against the government and law enforcers for their “failure to check target killings of the Hazaras”. Enraged protesters removed barricades erected by law enforcers on Zarghoon Road and entered the high security zone where they staged a sit-in outside the Governor House and Chief Minister Secretariat.

Meanwhile, targeted killings of the Hazaras continued unabated in Quetta as another member of the community was shot dead soon after Friday prayers.

The victim, Muhammad Ali Hazara, a watchman by profession, was shot dead by gunmen outside a shop on Abdul Sattar Road. With the latest killing the number of Hazaras killed over the last 24 hours has risen to four. Six Hazaras were targeted on Monday last.

The latest killing whipped up panic in different neighbourhoods of the city, including Liaquat Bazaar, Prince Road, Mezan Chowk and Jinnah Road where shopping centres, markets and eateries were closed. However, contingents of police and FC reached the spot to restore order.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 14th, 2012.

8 people including policeman killed in Quetta

Quetta shooting spree claims eight lives - II

Friday, April 13, 2012

کوئٹہ: ٹارگٹ کلنگ کے خلاف دھرنا



ہزارہ ڈیموکرٹیک پارٹی نےگورنر بلوچستان سے مطالبہ کیا ہے کہ ہزارہ قبیلے کے افراد کی ٹارگٹ کلنگ روکنے کے لیے انتظامات کیے جائیں۔
گورنر نے یقین دہانی کرائی ہے کہ وہ جلد صوبائی حکومت سے بات کریں گے۔ دوسری جانب نامعلوم افراد کی فائرنگ سے ایک خاتون سمیت ہزارہ قبیلے کے دو افراد ہلاک ہوگئے ہیں۔
کوئٹہ سے بی بی سی کے نامہ نگار ایوب ترین کے مطابق جمعہ کے روز ہزارہ ڈیموکرٹیک پارٹی نے کوئٹہ سمیت صوبے کے دیگرعلاقوں میں ہزارہ قبیلے کی مسلسل ٹارگٹ کلنگ کے خلاف کوئٹہ میں گورنرہاؤس کے سامنے دھرنا دیا جو کئی گھنٹوں تک جاری رہا۔
اس دھرنے میں سینکڑوں کی تعداد میں نوجوانوں نے شرکت کی۔ دھرنے میں شریک مظاہرین نے ہاتھوں میں پلے کارڈ بھی اٹھا رکھے تھے جن پر صوبائی حکومت کے خلاف نعرے درج تھے۔
اس موقعے پر ہزارہ ڈیموکرٹیک پارٹی کے چیئرمین عبدالخالق ہزارہ نے کہا کہ ایک سوچے سمجھے منصوبے کے تحت ہزارہ برادری کو ٹارگٹ کیا جا رہا ہے اور صوبائی حکومت لوگوں کی جان اور مال کے تحفظ میں ناکام ہوچکی ہے۔
تاہم ہزارہ قبیلے سے تعلق رکھنے والے صوبائی وزیر جان علی چینگیزی نے کہا کہ مذہبی منافرت کی بنیاد پر شیعہ سنی کو لڑانے کی کوشش کی جا رہی ہے۔ ایک سنی کی ہلاکت کے بعد شیعہ مسلک سے تعلق رکھنے والوں کا ٹارگٹ کلنگ شروع ہوجاتی ہے۔ بقول ان کے پولیس نے چند افراد گرفتار کیے ہیں لیکن ابھی ٹارگٹ کلنگ کا سلسلہ بند نہیں ہوا ہے۔
بعد میں ہزارہ ڈیموکرٹیک پارٹی کے ایک وفد نے گورنر بلوچستان نواب ذوالفقار مگسی سے ملاقات کی۔
ملاقات میں گورنر بلوچستان نے وفد کو یقین دہانی کرائی کہ وہ جلد اس سلسلے میں وزیراعلی بلوچستان نواب اسلم رئیسانی سے بات چیت کریں گے۔ گورنر نے امن و امان کی صورتحال پر تشویش کا اظہار کرتے ہوئے سیکرٹری داخلہ نصیب اللہ بازئی کو کوئٹہ شہر میں سیکورٹی کے انتظامات سخت کرنے کی ہدایت کی۔
گورنر اور وفد کے درمیان مذاکرات جاری تھے کہ نامعلوم افراد نے کوئٹہ کے عبدالستار روڈ پر فائرنگ کرکے گھڑی ساز محمد علی کو ہلاک کر دیا جن کا تعلق بھی ہزارہ قبیلے سے تھا۔ جبکہ کاسی روڈ پر ہزارہ قبیلے سے تعلق رکھنے والی ایک خاتون بھی ٹارگٹ کلنگ کا نشانہ بنیں۔
خیال رہے کہ گزشتہ شب بھی کوئٹہ شہر میں فائرنگ کے دو مختلف واقعات میں ہزارہ قبیلے سے تعلق رکھنے والے تین افراد ہلاک اور دو زخمی ہوئے تھے۔
اس طرح گزشتہ دوہفتوں کے دوران کوئٹہ شہر میں ٹارگٹ کلنگ کے تحت ہزارہ قبیلے کےآٹھارہ افراد ہلا ک ہوچکے ہیں لیکن ابھی تک کسی تنظیم نے اسکی ذمہ داری قبول نہیں کی ہے۔