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.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

کوئٹہ: زائرین کی بس میں دھماکہ، چھ ہلاک


آخری وقت اشاعت: جمعرات 28 جون 2012 ,‭ 16:07 GMT 21:07 PST



پاکستان کےصوبہ بلوچستان کے دارلحکومت کوئٹہ میں ایران جانے والی زائرین کی بس میں دھماکے سے چھ افراد ہلاک اور پندرہ مسافر زخمی ہو گئے۔

کوئٹہ کے علاقے ہزار گنجی میں جمعرات کی شام ایران جانے والی زائرین کی بس کے قریب اس وقت دھماکہ ہوا جب بس پولیس کی نگرانی میں ہزارگنجی سے تفتان کے لیے روانہ ہوئی۔

ابتدائی اطلاعات کے مطابق دھماکے میں ایک پولیس اہلکار سمیت چھ افراد ہلا ک اور پندرہ زخمی ہوئے جن میں خواتین اور بچے بھی شامل ہیں۔

عینی شاہدین کے مطابق بس کو پہاڑی علاقے سے راکٹ کے ذریعے نشانہ بنایاگیا جس سے زور دار دھماکہ ہوا اور اس کے بعد بس الٹ گئی۔

پولیس کے مطابق بس میں ساٹھ کے قریب مسافر سوار تھے جن میں سے اکثر کا تعلق ہزارہ قبیلے سے ہے۔

نامہ نگار ایوب ترین کے مطابق دھماکے کے بعد زخمیوں کو سول ہسپتال، بولان میڈیکل کمپلیکس اور سی ایم ایچ ہسپتال کوئٹہ منتقل کیا گیا۔

دھماکے کے بعد پولیس اور فرنٹیئرکور کے اہلکار موقع پر پہنچ گئے اور علاقے کو گھیرے میں لیکر تحقیقات شروع کردیں۔

دوسری جانب بلوچ لیبریشن آرمی کے ترجمان میرک بلوچ نے ایک نامعلوم مقام سے بی بی سی کو ٹیلی فون کر کے سبی ریلوے سٹیشن پر کل رات ہونے والے بم دھماکے کی ذمہ داری قبول کی ہے جس میں چھ افراد ہلاک ہوئے تھے۔

ترجمان کا کہنا تھا کہ بلوچ مزاحمت کاروں نے سیکورٹی فورسز کی ایک بوگی کو نشانہ بنایا۔

واضح رہے کہ کل رات سبی ریلوے سٹیشن پر پلیٹ فارم نمبر دو پر قائم چائے کی دکان پر دھماکہ ہواتھا جس میں چھ افراد ہلاک اور بیس زخمی ہوئے تھے۔

ہلاک ہونے والوں میں سے ایک کاتعلق پنجاب اورتین کا تعلق سبی سے تھا جبکہ ایک بچے سمیت دوافراد کی تاحال شناخت نہیں ہوسکی۔

Blast targets bus carrying Shia pilgrims in Quetta, 18 killed

By Web Desk
Published: June 28, 2012


A paramilitary soldier stands guard near a damaged bus destroyed in a bomb attack in the outskirts of Quetta June 28, 2012. PHOTO: REUTERS

QUETTA: A blast in the Hazarganji area of Quetta targeted a bus carrying Shia pilgrims from Taftan to the provincial capital on Thursday, Express News reported. Eighteen people were killed and 30 were injured as a result of the blast.

Eyewitnesses said that the bus was carrying pilgrims from Taftan and it was targeted when it was passing near a fruit market in the Hazarganji area. Around 15-20kg explosives were used in the blast. A woman and a policeman are also among the dead.

Some eyewitnesses have also claimed that the blast was a suicide attack, officials have not confirmed this as yet.

Initial reports also state that four policemen on the mobile were injured after the blast.

There is no confirmation on the nature of the blast as yet.

It has also been reported that the bus was destroyed as a result of the blast.

The injured were shifted to Civil hospital and Bolan Medical Complex.

Correction: An earlier version of this article had incorrectly mentioned the location of Taftan. The correction has been made.

Hazarganji area of Quetta Bomb Blsst - CCPO Quetta Sot

Ary News 28 june 2012 Quetta Bus Rocket Fire 28 June 2012

Hazarganji area of Quetta Bomb Blsst - Geo TV

Jang; Hazaraganji Bomb Blast


Dawn TV; Bomb Blast in Hazaraganji, Quetta

AAJ News; Suicide attack on Pilgrims' Bus; 15 dead

Blast targets bus carrying pilgrims in Quetta, 8 killed


By Web Desk
Published: June 28, 2012


A blast in the Hazarganji area of Quetta targeted a bus carrying pilgrims from Taftan to the provincial capital. PHOTO: EXPRESS

QUETTA: A blast in the Hazarganji area of Quetta targeted a bus carrying pilgrims from Taftan to the provincial capital on Thursday, Express News reported. Eight people were killed a number of people were injured.

Eyewitnesses said that the bus was carrying pilgrims from Taftan and it was targeted when it was passing near a fruit market in the Hazarganji area.

Initial reports also state that four policemen on the mobile were injured after the blast.

There is no confirmation on the nature of the blast as yet.

It has also been reported that the bus was destroyed as a result of the blast.

The injured were shifted to Civil hospital and Bolan Medical Complex.

Afghanistan: War Zone or Ski Resort?

27 June 2012

With skiers desperate for new adventures, could the mountains of Bamiyan become a snowsport holiday destination? Katherine Makris explores the possibility






Beautiful, fresh snow covering high, undiscovered mountains is not often an image associated with Afghanistan, the infamously war-torn country. But this may, in time, change.

Recently some extreme skiers have risked their lives with the Taliban to visit Bamiyan in central Afghanistan, and explore the Koh-e-Baba mountain range. With the third annual Afghan Ski Challenge returning in 2013, will more contestants take part than the fifteen in 2012?

Reports describe stunning views of the surrounding mountains and the country below, and mountain vistas hiding many unexplored peaks. There are a range of slopes for skiers and snowboarders making it a perfect destination for people from the western world, but it is a destination still in the centre of a war zone.

Despite often being associated with the bombings of the giant Buddha statues, the Bamiyan Mountains are actually one of the safest destinations in Afghanistan. But the journey to the slopes can be very dangerous. With no planes flying directly to Bamiyan, visitors must fly to Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan. Here, they face the option of a six-hour road trip or another plane journey with an Afghan airline. Either way, there’s a high risk of danger with Taliban activity so close.

On arrival, getting to the top of the slopes is another conundrum. While the western world has chairlifts and gondolas, Bamiyan offers a 5000 metre climb with skins, or you can hire a donkey from a local farmer to get you to the summit. But those who reach the top claim the views are worth the dangers, and are eager for others to join them.




For the vast majority, the risks of skiing in Afghanistan seem to outweigh the remarkable sights. Therefore, in the past two years, a Swiss skier, Christoph Zurcher, has launched the Afghan Ski Challenge in the hopes of attracting more skiers to venture across the untouched terrain. The event encourages skiers and snowboarders from across the globe to participate in a seven-kilometre race.

In the 2012 Afghan Ski Challenge, ten Afghans and five foreigners took part. The top three places were all taken by locals, mainly due to their quick ascent up the slope, a skill not easy to master. Khalil Reza (19) won the 2012 race in 44 minutes, despite his relative lack of skiing experience.

So, if you are on the look out for a new ski destination which is well and truly off the beaten path, why not Afghanistan? Yes, the dangers and challenge are enough to dissuade most, but the rewards for any brave enthusiast are unmatched.


Words by Katherine Makris


Applications to next year’s Afghan Ski Challenge are now open. All foreign entrants are required to pay a fee of £320. For more information about the race, visit www.afghanskichallenge.com

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Those in peril on the sea


BY:MARK DODD AND BRENDAN NICHOLSON
From:The Australian
June 28, 2012 12:00AM



A boat packed with asylum-seekers arrives at Christmas Island on August 11 last year, weeks before the High Court's decision scuttling offshore processing. Picture: Stephen Cooper Source: The Australian


THE jagged scar across his son's throat is a constant reminder to Said Alawi of why he sold everything he owned to raise $10,000 - the price of a ticket on a leaky boat and a storm-lashed journey to Australia.

The child was just three when Taliban insurgents told his mother they'd kill him if he did not reveal where his father was. To make his point, the insurgent with the knife slashed firmly enough to leave a wound that was deep but not fatal.

That wound scarred Said's psyche and left a terror for his family so deep that it overcame the fear of crossing an ocean he and his family and most members of his community had never seen to a land vastly foreign to anything they'd ever dreamed of.

During the past two years, Australians have watched horrified as hundreds of asylum-seekers have died in unseaworthy boats that have capsized, sunk or blown up.

Refugee advocates estimate that more than 1000 refugees have died in such disasters, many of them vanishing in storms and unseen by rescue teams.

More than 100 men, women and children have died in that way just in the past week.

On December 17 last year a boat carrying about 250 passengers sank off Java. More than 100 bodies were found, while 98 of those believed aboard remain unaccounted for and are presumed to have drowned. Just 49 were rescued.

In November last year, 30 died in yet another sinking off southern Java. On December 15, 2010, the nation watched appalled as SIEV 221 smashed on to rocks at Christmas Island, killing at least 50 of those aboard while island locals stood helplessly by.

Since January 1, 64 boats carrying 4678 asylum-seekers and 127 crew from Afghanistan, Sri Lanka and Iran have come to Australia, earning people-smugglers millions of dollars.

Brisbane-based migration lawyer Bruce Henry, whose clients include many Hazara asylum-seekers from Afghanistan, says the experience of the sea voyage from Indonesia to Australia leaves families traumatised for years. "You have to remember they're Afghans and none has ever seen the ocean before," he tells The Australian.

Mohamed Ali, now a meat worker in Kilcoy in southern Queensland, wanted to travel with friends to Sydney. Henry told Ali and his friends they should take the coast road and stop at Yamba, where there's a wonderful saltwater pool.

"They all looked at me with absolute horror," Henry says. "Mohamed Ali said to me: 'We're never going near the ocean again as long as we live. When we drive to Sydney we're taking the inland route.' "

Pamela Curr, campaign co-ordinator at the Melbourne Asylum Seeker Resource Centre, tells The Australian she has files full of accounts by people who left their homes, their farms, their animals, their families and everything after receiving so-called "night letters" from the Taliban warning that they were going to be killed.

"They leave out of sheer desperation and lack of any other real alternatives," she says. "In practical terms, there is no proper way to get out of Afghanistan -- no embassy to apply for a visa. It doesn't work like that, so they have to flee and travel illegally.

"If there is no other way to get your family out safely, this is what you do."

From the late 1970s, Malcolm Fraser oversaw policies under which Australia accepted more than 70,000 refugees from Indochina. He says asylum-seekers are fleeing terrors far greater than that of the oceans that have swallowed so many of them.

"If people are fleeing what they regard as persecution or terror or danger to their kids or a place where there is absolutely no future for their family, then any kind of civilised government cannot create a nasty enough policy to deter them from trying to get somewhere else," Fraser told The Australian this week.

The former prime minister says the debate in Australia has made people-smugglers the cause of the problem. "It's not the cause. It's a consequence of tyranny. If you could some way get rid of terror and tyrannies, that would be the best way to get rid of people-smugglers. There'd be no market for them.

"No punitive measure, no nastiness by any Australian government, can match the terror from which a genuine refugee is fleeing," Fraser says.

That was the case with Alawi's family, part of the minority Hazara community, long persecuted by the largely Pashtun Taliban.

The family lived in Oruzgan province in southern Afghanistan where Alawi, then 26, ran a small shop. The Taliban turned up at his home after the Hazara community had been subjected to months of persecution.

The insurgents' intention was clear. Weeks before, the Taliban had murdered 35 Hazara men living nearby and tossed their bodies down a well. Family members were forced to pay the insurgents to get the bodies back for burial.

Alawi decided to escape to Australia, a country he had been told was "safe and rich". The prospect of a better life for his family justified the risks and the uncertainty of the voyage, Alawi says from his home in Brisbane. "It was a terrible time in Afghanistan. Schools were all closed, there was no economy, we were ordered to grow beards, were threatened and harassed all the time. I decided it was time we leave," he says.

Smugglers took the family to Quetta in Pakistan. Then they flew to Bangkok and on to Medan in Indonesia, then Jakarta. From there they flew to Surabaya to catch a ferry to Sumbawa in the chain of islands stretching down towards Timor.

That was their jump-off point.

At about 11pm they were taken to a beach with about 250 other passengers, mostly Hazaras, but including some Iranians. There was an early hint that all was not well when, as the vessel left Indonesia, two of its crew climbed into a small craft it was towing and headed for home in it.

Then followed a nightmare six-day voyage to Ashmore Reef with little food in a vessel that was "broken". After three days, the journey became a living hell.

"After three nights came the rain and very, very big winds," Alawi says.

"It pushed the boat over on its side. I was holding on for my life. The boat was shaking and water had begun to pour in. We were ordered to move to the other side. Lots of people were seasick, especially the women and children.

"Nobody had energy, we were so tired," Alawi continues. "It was a terrible time. Everyone on board was saying: 'Now we are going to die.' The captain announced we'd lost our way and he did not know where we were heading, and all the kids were crying."

To add to the terror, the Afghans discovered there were no life vests on board.

Eventually the storm subsided. The boat had taken on a lot of water and most of the precious store of drinking water and meagre food supplies had been lost overboard or contaminated in the chaos of the storm.

The boat arrived off Ashmore Reef, a tiny uninhabited Australian territory 840km west of Darwin, and was spotted by a Customs patrol plane. To the desperate asylum-seekers, that aircraft signalled salvation. "It was like a rainbow," Alawi says. Within hours a navy patrol boat arrived.

The family was housed in Woomera immigration detention centre in South Australia before being issued temporary protection visas. Alawi and his family were finally granted permanent residence and settled in Brisbane.

Today, he speaks fluent English and the former shopkeeper now works as a counsellor for aid agency Lives Without Barriers, caring for children and young people in immigration detention.

There is a dreadful repetition in the stories told by survivors of tragedy after tragedy. When last week's boat sank, it was believed to be carrying more than 200 people. Merchant ships and naval vessels rescued 110 of them.

Marine rescue experts calculated with grim precision that they had just 36 hours to find survivors who might be floating in life jackets or clinging to debris.

As RAAF and navy crews and merchant seamen searched with increasing desperation, that window shrank and closed with only bodies left to find.

Glimpses of the last days aboard the stricken vessel came in calls made on mobile phones by those aboard to relatives already in Australia.

One of those onboard the stricken vessel, Mohamed Salman, managed several calls to his cousin "Ali", who lives in Melbourne. In their last conversation Mohamed complained of a sore throat. Asked why it was hurting, Mohamed replied: "Everyone is praying loudly that we will be safe."

That call was received on the Monday soon after the boat set off on its doomed voyage and four days before it sank. Ali accuses people-smugglers of "playing with the lives of people".

One asylum-seeker who refused to board the overcrowded boat told the Pakistan Dawn newspaper how his last-minute decision saved his life. "I was about to board the vessel but changed my mind at the last moment when I saw the crowd," he said.

The dangers of the voyage have triggered calls by one refugee advocacy group for authorities to provide asylum-seekers with emergency radio beacons to help save lives in the event of a sinking.

The Refugee Action Coalition's Ian Rintoul has conceded this could break anti-people-smuggling laws, but he says more lives could be saved if boats carried radio beacons or EPIRBs (emergency position indicating radio beacons).

"We're getting advice that this could clash with the people-smuggling laws so we may well fall foul of that, although that's not necessarily an obstacle to us going ahead and doing it," Rintoul says.

That threat has left Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare unimpressed. He warns that there is no safe way to come to Australia on a people-smuggler's vessel.

"Anyone suggesting an EPIRB makes boarding a people-smuggling vessel any safer should consider the serious consequences of encouraging asylum-seekers to put their lives at risk," Clare says.

Brisbane-based migration lawyer Mark Plunkett says the government's policy of destroying asylum-seeker boats has led to the increasing use of unseaworthy vessels.

Fraser, meanwhile, says the answer to the refugee issue could be a regional solution in which Australia and some of its allies and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees reach an agreement with Malaysia or Indonesia guaranteeing to take refugees from holding camps there.

Last night, Tony Abbott was offering to boost the nation's refugee intake to 20,000 a year.

"It was done before and it was done amicably," Fraser says.

After Vietnam, Australia, the US and Canada all agreed to take thousands of people to avoid boat tragedies. "We had about 70,000 refugees over quite a short time and everybody accepted it," he says.

The result was an economic boost for Australia. "Indochinese immigration has, in economic terms, probably paid off a thousandfold for Australia. They are very productive citizens."

COMMENT : Denigrating the Hazaras — I — Dr Mohammad Taqi




The post-1978 ethno-national revival of the Hazaras has been a subject of serious scholarship, which apparently Mr Marri is unaware of

An article titled “Balochistan: sectarian strife or Hazara community targeted?” written by Mr Surat Khan Marri appeared in these pages this past weekend. The piece is not just an extremely callous one but is littered with factual inaccuracies too. Given the prevailing situation in Balochistan and the important position of Quetta, where most of the Pakistani Hazara community resides, it is pertinent to set the record straight.

Mr Marri starts with a not-so-subtle attack on the ethnic origins and the social and political status of the Hazaras in Afghanistan. He wrote, “The Hazara community may claim to be descendants of the Great Khan of the Mongols or a remnant of the Mughals/Mongol conquerors of India via Afghanistan. However, in their recent abode, Afghanistan, they are considered and treated as of low-caste, compelled to work as sweepers and clean latrines, like some Christians in Pakistan and Harijans in India. In Afghanistan, they are in a considerable number, maybe half a million, but in Afghan challenges or wars against the British, Russians, the recent resistance termed as the war on terror, American and NATO aggression, the Hazara community in Afghanistan has no role. Afghans blame them for collaboration with the US and Pakistan.”

I find Mr Marri’s slur no different than, and perhaps picked from, 14-pages that the Afghan Gazetteer had dedicated to the Hazaras or Mountstuart Elphinstone’s 1815 drivel against the Hazaras. It is well known that Elphinstone never went beyond Peshawar, and even there, he stayed about four months and gathered information from people who had been fighting the Hazaras for ages. There is no hiding the fact the Hazara of central Afghanistan have historically remained at odds with the Pashtun dynasties of Afghanistan and faced extermination at the hands of the latter. Persecuted communities and especially those forced into internal and external displacement doing hard labour — I would not even call it menial or odd jobs — is not an uncommon phenomenon around the world. But Mr Marri has thrown the epithet to rule out a political role for the Hazaras in Afghanistan, and by extension in Pakistan, as he states later.

On the eve of the 1978 Saur Revolution in Afghanistan, the Hazaras, like most other Afghans, were active on both sides of the political divide. They were a part of the Marxist movement in the 1960s, especially in the Parcham faction of the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA). Affiliation with the Parcham earned them the wrath of the Khalq faction, which imprisoned thousands of Parchamis during the intra-party feuds of 1978. With the rise of the Parcham leaders Babrak Karmal, and then Dr Najibullah to power, the Hazara leaders like Dr Sultan Ali Kishtmand and the brothers Syed Nasir Nadiri and Syed Mansur were restored to power. Dr. Kishtmand remained the prime minister of Afghanistan until parting ways with the PDPA in 1991. Syed Mansur’s forces in Shiberghan and Baghlan had the status of the official PDPA government militia. On the opposite end of the spectrum, the rural Hazara uprisings against the PDPA started as early as 1979, e.g. in Waras and Yakaolang and led to the formation of Shura-e-Inquilab-e-Ittifaq-e-Islami and its various reincarnations, including an eight-party Mujahedeen alliance, and then the Hizb-e-Wahdat party of Abdul Ali Mazari and Karim Khalili (currently the second vice president of Afghanistan). The post-1978 ethno-national revival of the Hazaras has been a subject of serious scholarship, which apparently Mr Marri is unaware of.

Another allegation Mr Marri has levelled is that the Quetta Hazaras somehow exploited the local Baloch welcome. He fails to mention the dominant Pashtuns as the host population, who switched loyalties first to the British and then to the succeeding state of Pakistan. He says: “On their migration to Balochistan, they enjoyed and felt comfortable living in a Baloch liberal and heterogeneous society. However, they soon realised that power and the future lay somewhere else. They allied themselves with British employers and camp followers and had friendly relations with local Baloch-Pashtun collaborators.” Mr. Marri alleges that the Hazaras of Quetta found new patrons in the new Pakistan Punjabi/Urdu speaking elite and somehow, were given more than their due share in government services, especially the armed forces. This assertion ignores the fact that Pashtuns like Qazi Issa and Baloch like Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti Shaheed had also embraced the new power players like Mr M A Jinnah — the same ‘Karachiite’ that Mr Marri castigates elsewhere in the piece.

Mr Marri then writes, “Because of their (Hazara’s) allegiance to the new power, the rulers were of the opinion that this minority may replace and fill the vacuum created by the departure of the British army Gurkhas. The Pakistan army started recruiting a large number of Balochistan-based Hazaras, some of whom rose to the rank of general — General Musa being one example; brigadiers (Brigadier Sharbat), and other high ranks.”

Sharbat Ali Changezi was a Hazara but not a brigadier. I know this because his children were my schoolmates in Pakistan Air Force School, Peshawar in the 1970s/80s. Air Marshal Changezi served multiple tours of duty at Peshawar at the PAF base and then the Air Headquarters. Out of the two servicemen, Mr. Marri names to make his case, he is wrong about both. Even his spiel about Hazaras being a replacement for the Gurkhas is a farfetched one. The British had formed a Hazara Pioneers regiment but it was already disbanded by 1933. One will be hard pressed to find names other than General Musa and AM Sharbat Changezi in the top tiers of the Pakistani armed forces. Officers like General Musa were absorbed into the Frontier Force regiment and no Hazara ‘Gurkha’ regiment ever existed in Pakistan.

Mr Marri’s claim that made the lead was, “When General Musa became the governor of West Pakistan, he declared the Hazaras a local tribe of Balochistan through an ordinance.” This assertion needs vetting as the Political Agent Quetta-Pishin issued the final notification declaring Hazaras and three other Afghan tribes, viz Durrani, Yusafzai and Ghilzai, as local/indigenous tribesmen of Quetta on June 22, 1962. The notification refers to two letters dated February 19, 1962 and May 10, 1962 from the Ministry of States and Frontier Regions. The dates put Nawab Amir Muhammad Khan of Kalabagh as the governor West Pakistan and General Musa as army chief, not governor.

Regardless, it is the xenophobic and sectarian undertones of Mr Marri’s article that are of primary concern in the evolving situation in Balochistan.

(To be concluded)

The writer can be reached at mazdaki@me.com and he tweets at http://twitter.com/mazdaki

A U.S. citizen’s perspective on silent Shia genocide taking place in Pakistan – by Rusty Walker





The recent wave of cold-blooded targeted killings of Shiites Muslims at multiple locations throughout Pakistan is almost too horrific to digest. More than 250 Shias have been brutally murdered in the last three months alone; a similar number of Shias are injured or permanently maimed.

In September 2011 in Mastung (Balochistan), February 2012 in Kohistan (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa) and April 2012 in Chilas (Gilgit Baltistan), a similar pattern of segregating Shia passengers from Sunnis, followed by their brutal murder was repeated.

Massacre in Mastung happened next to a Pakistan army check post, massacre in Kohistan was conducted by militants wearing Pakistan Army uniforms, and the Chilas massacre happened right next to the local police station. According toa recent statement by the Asian Human Rights Commission, it is hard to refute the accusation that military is involved in killing of Shias in Pakistan.

In all of these massacres, attackers repeated the atrocity of lining up and identifying only Shiite passengers, who were segregated from Sunnis and murdered on the spot.

In the most recent incident, on 3 April 2012, where the banned Deobandi group Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (currently operating as Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat ASWJ) ordered several passenger buses to stop near Chilas, and proceeded to machine-gun down all those identified as Shiites is a clear show of genocide in progress. Eye-witness accounts claim that those who ran were either shot or bludgeoned to death with rocks, several were burnt with acid or submerged under water.

The target killing of Shia Muslims in Pakistan is not a new phenomenon. On June 6, 1963, over a hundred Shiites were martyred and twelve injured by the Wahhabi-Deobandi extremists in the Terhi town, near Khair Pur, on the sacred day of Ashura (10 Muharram) during the military regime of General Ayub Khan. On that tragic day 118 Shiites lost their lives; their only crime: participation in Muharram rituals.

During General Zia-ul-Haq’s martial Law, 1977-1988, the Shiite persecution and target killing became more systematic element of the state’s policy.

In the last six decades, we have witnessed the gradual conversion of Pakistan from a secular state (Jinnah’s speech on August 11, 1947), to an Islamic state (Objectives Resolution in 1949) to a Sunni State (General Zia-ul-Haq’s promulgation of Sunni Islam) to a Deobandi-Wahhabi State through the Pakistan Army’s willing participation into anti-Soviet Union Jihad in Afghanistan, which was financed, unfortunately, by U.S. during its myopic Cold-War mentality, and by Saudi petro-dollars and indoctrinated by a Jihadi Wahhabi-Deobandi ideology. While the US had perhaps short-sighted geo-strategic reasons to participate in anti-Soviet Union resistance in Afghanistan, it was a mistake to allow the Saudi-ISI duo to produce a rabidly violent and intolerant breed of Salafi-Deobandi Jihadis.

Formation of the Siph-e-Sahaba-Pakistan (a Jihadi-sectarian Deobandi organization) in early 1980s by Pakistan Army was intended to counter and harass Pakistan’s Shia Muslims in order to suppress their opposition to the Wahhabi-ization of Pakistan and also to reinforce the Deobandi-Wahhabi Jihad Enterprise in Afghanistan and Kashmir.

The systematic murder of Shiite Pakistanis can be tracked from mid-1980s to the present date. Gruesome details and data are available on Shia activists’ websites such as the World Shia Forum, Shaheed Foundation and Shia Killing.

Here is an overview of most recent statistics in the last three months:
January 2012 – 58 killed: http://criticalppp.com/archives/70763
February – 71 killed: http://pakistanblogzine.wordpress.com/2012/03/07/71-shia-muslims-target-killed-in-pakistan-during-february-2012/
March – 30 killed: http://pakistanblogzine.wordpress.com/2012/04/05/shia-genocide-report-30-shia-muslims-target-killed-in-pakistan-in-march-2012/
April: More than 110 killed so far (till 10 April 2012)

There is a consistent neglect of this targeted Shiite killing bordering on apathy from Pakistani and international Human Rights groups, civil society and media (both right wing Urdu media and liberal elites in English media), some of whom may have been paid off or/and harassed by the Pakistan Army/ISI.

How can this be allowed to continue? The answer: the Pakistani Army and ISI along with the Supreme Court and some members of the civilian government (e.g., Interior Minister Rehman Malik, Balochistan CM Raisani etc) are too much invested in protecting the Jihadi-sectarian militants of the Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan, i.e., Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat /ASWJ-SSP and its strategic depth Frankenstein, to stop it. Fear of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Lashkar-e-Taiba, SSP-ASWJ and Taliban (Wahhabi-Deobandi militants) turning on Pakistan itself, sets up the Perfect Storm for the massacre of perceived infidels, the Shiites, along with other persecuted groups e.g., Ahmadis, Sunni Barelvis, Christians, Hindus etc. However, the number of Shias killed is far greater than any other faith-based target killing in Pakistan. Routinely maligned, and erroneously aligned with separatists or Iranian-links in a smear campaign, the Shiites for the most part, are middle class, intelligent, tolerant, peaceful and productive members of Pakistan society on all levels of occupations, from common workers, and entrepreneurs, to medical, judicial, commerce and government officers.

And yet, Jihadi-Deobandi SSP/ASWJ militants align with Salafist LeT/JuD and Pakistan Taliban to engage in what can only be described as a systematic elimination of all Shiites, reminiscent of Nazi Germany or Stalin’s ruthless murder of Ukrainians in intensity varying only in the numbers killed. However, the death toll of Shias in Pakistan is rising on a frequent basis.

The recent massacres occurring of Shias in Pakistan suggest either authorities’ incompetency, fear or perhaps some law enforcement agencies are complicit with the killers. Perpetrators that kill and attack in plain sight are never investigated, arrested or prosecuted. The violence is not limited to one region or ethnicity (Shias are found in various ethnic groups in Pakistan), but has spread through southern Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkha, and may be linked to organized target killing of Shias in Karachi (Sindh), Quetta in Balochistan, and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas bordering Afghanistan.

The Pakistani civilian government has a mindset of “hands-off” in terms of Shiite rights protections, despite President Zardari’s Shiite background. The principle being that the military formed the Jihadi-sectarian militants as proxy warriors and let them handle it- but, further, Zardari, from the Bhutto dynasty, should be understood also as being aware of assassination as a danger as no other president prior to him, were he to cross the line against the ISI/ Pak Army. Demonstrators and others who speak out are in real and present danger. The Pakistan Army still ignores atrocities in Parachinar, Gilgit Baltistan, and Balochistan. The Pakistan military is too much of a threat to citizens that speak out, including the media, to be accountable for its abuses and what is an outright genocide on Shiites being perpetuated throughout Pakistan.

As an American, I have written on the topic of Shia genocide and the role of the military establishment in Pakistan – thus proving that there is no monolithic viewpoint in America and that we welcome criticism of the US foreign policy. There are many moderate Americans like me who want to highlight the situation of Shias in Pakistan where they are facing genocide at the hands of the Islamist (Wahhabi-Deobandi) Jihadis that are being nourished by some sections of the military establishment.

However, a blanket, reactive criticism of US foreign policy is not the correct way to work together either. In the United States, there is a very strong Saudi-Ikhwan lobby that is trying to make us do its dirty work in Syria and wants us to align ourselves with Al Qaeda. While I have no love lost for a police state like Syria, I am uncomfortable that the Saudis want to drag my country into supporting the Al Qaeda mercenaries that are attacking Syria from Turkey and Jordan.

Furthermore, the rot in the situation is not just from my end. At my end, there are many Americans who are deeply critical of the US State department being influenced by the Saudi-Ikhwan lobby. However, in Pakistan, the Jinnah Institute FP elite report was an eye opener in that it included 53 prominent journalists, analysts who, without specific dissent, endorsed recommendations that Mullah Omar and the Haqqani Taliban network needs to be supported Post 2014! Barring a few journalists of integrity and the LUBP blog, the mainstream media (including a bulk of liberal elites) lent their full support to these horrific recommendations – recommendations which are an open invitation to the Taliban to take over Pakistan, purge it of all non-Wahhabi-Deobandis and take it back to the Stone Ages.

While the United States must not engage with Taliban, why is it that Pakistani intelligentsia provides it with no choice but to engage with the Taliban. It is now imperative that before the US is pushed further into the Saudi embrace, it must realize that several in Pakistan’s seemingly liberal intelligentsia (much of which works as a tool to raise anti-US sentiment in Pakistan) is not the honest partner it claims to be. The Jinnah Institute and other similar reports emanating from ISI-sponsored think tanks should be chucked in the can.



Appeal to international community and human rights organizations

An appeal to the justice system and Human Rights Organization would be in order. However, currently one would be hard pressed to consider Pakistan judiciary’s indirect role in enabling the Shia genocide. Aside from known killers being pardoned due to military pressure, the judicial over-reach and unwarranted actions over and above the affairs of the legislature and the executive prove that the military has influenced, if not intimidated the judiciary as well as the so-called establishment “free press.” Reports are that General Kayani has been involved in pay-offs to Mullahs and press to distort the killings as historically expected Sunni-Shiite sectarian violence. This is a distortion of the State-sponsored Shia genocide particularly in view of the fact that majority of Sunnis have dissociated from ASWJ-SSP and other Jihadi-sectarian militants.

Because the corrupt Supreme Court will not go against the Army/ISI which tacitly still supports ASWJ-SSP-LeJ, which has grown in wealth and numbers, independent of any control over it now; elements in the Pak Army are in league together with these groups. It appears that the Pak Army remains concerned over cracking down on ASWJ/LeJ/SSP and LeT/JuD in fear of risking all these splinter groups joining in unison with the Pakistan Taliban would once again start attacking the state with impunity (as they did against General Musharaf). Pak Army also remains complicit with LeT over its obsession with India, so, much easier to allow atrocities on Shiites, and insist on the mainstream press to mislabel it as sectarian unrest.

Foreign correspondents in Pakistan are perpetuating the same silence and misrepresentation to international media. State sponsored Shia genocide is misrepresented as Sunni vs Shia conflict, ignoring the fact that Sunni Barelvi Muslims (majority of Sunnis) have rejected fringe Deobandi militants who are a part of SSP-ASWJ and Taliban, and also the fact that Shias are being killed by the ISI, not Sunnis.

In the last few months, the situation has reached the stage of a human rights crisis. If the international media, human rights groups, US, EU, UN and the international community in general do not pay urgent attention, the Jihadist militants will be further encouraged by no interference, in which case, the atrocities of this type generally escalate, and may turn into another Rwanda or Armenia.

About the author:

About the author: Rusty Walker is an Independent Political Analyst, educator, author, Vietnam veteran-era U.S. Air Force, from a military family, retired college professor, former Provost (Collins College, U.S.A.), artist, musician and family man. Mr. Walker is an ardent supporter of Pakistan. Here is a link to Mr. Walker’s other articles published on  LUBP: http://criticalppp.com/archives/tag/rusty-walker

One year old girl is orphaned


Tuesday, June 26, 2012

کشتی ڈوبنے سے سترہ تارکینِ وطن ہلاک، نوّے لاپتہ


آخری وقت اشاعت: منگل 26 جون 2012 ,‭ 16:31 GMT 21:31 PST



اطلاعات کے مطابق کشتی کے حادثے میں سترہ کے قریب افراد ہلاک ہوئے ہیں

بحرِ ہند میں کرسمس آئی لینڈ کے قریب انڈونیشیا سے آسٹریلیا جانے والی کشتی کے حادثے کے بعد شروع کی گئی امدادی کارروائیاں روک دی گئی ہیں تاہم کشتی پر سوار دو سو سے زائد افراد میں سے نوّے اب بھی لاپتہ ہیں۔

اکیس جون کو حادثے کا شکار ہونے والی کشتی پر آسٹریلیا میں پناہ کے خواہشمند پاکستانیوں سمیت کئی قومیتوں کے افراد سوار تھے اور اس حادثے میں سترہ افراد کی ہلاکت کی اطلاعات ہیں۔

آسٹریلیا میں پاکستانی ہائی کمشنر ملک عبداللہ نے بی بی سی اردو کے کاشف قمر کو فون پر بتایا کہ اگرچہ یہ حادثہ انڈونیشیا کی بحری حدود میں پیش آیا لیکن پیر کی شب ختم ہونے والا سرچ آپریشن زیادہ تر آسٹریلوی حکام ہی نے کیا۔

انہوں نے کہا کہ انہیں ملنے والی اطلاعات کے مطابق اکیس جون کو پیش آنے والے اس حادثے میں سترہ افراد ہلاک ہوئے، ایک سو آٹھ بچا لیے گئے جبکہ نوے کے قریب ابھی بھی لاپتہ ہیں۔

انہوں نے کہا کہ آسٹریلیا کے وزیرِ داخلہ کے ایک بیان کے مطابق ہلاک ہونے والے زیادہ تر افراد کا تعلق افغانستان سے ہے۔ تاہم انہوں نے کہا کہ ’ہمارے لیے بڑا مسئلہ یہ ہے کہ اس میں ہمارے کئی ایسے پاکستانی بھائی ہیں جنہوں نے سیاسی پناہ کے لیے اپنے آپ کو افغان شہری ظاہر کیا ہوا تھا۔‘

انہوں نے کہا کہ اس وقت تک ’ہم سے تین پاکستانیوں کے لواحقین نے رابطے کیے ہیں جن میں جاوید اقبال ولد اقبال حسین کا تعلق پنجاب، نعمت اللہ کا تعلق کرم ایجنسی جبکہ جابر حسین کا تعلق بھی کرم ایجنسی ہی سے بتایا جاتا ہے‘۔

پشاور میں متاثرہ خاندانوں کے ترجمان شاہد کاظمی نے بی بی سی کے نامہ نگار رفعت اللہ اورکزئی کو بتایا کہ بائیس جون کو تقریباً دو سو چھ افراد ایک کشتی کے ذریعے انڈونشیا سے آسٹریلیا کے لیے روانہ ہوئے تھے۔

ان کے مطابق اس کشتی میں جو دو سو چھ غیر قانونی تارکین وطن سوار تھے ان میں سے ایک سو پچیس کا تعلق کرم ایجنسی کے صدر مقام پارہ چنار اور متعدد کا تعلق بلوچستان کے شہر کوئٹہ سے بتایا گیا ہے۔

انہوں نے کہا کہ بین الاقوامی ذرائع ابلاغ اور بچ جانے والے افراد سے انہیں جو معلومات ملی ہیں اس کے مطابق یہ کشتی بحر ہند میں آسٹریلیا کی حدود میں کرسمس جزیرہ کے قریب حادثے کا شکار ہوئی جس میں اطلاعات کے مطابق سترہ افراد ہلاک ہوگئے جبکہ دیگر کو زندہ بچا لیا گیا۔

سیاسی پناہ کی خاطر۔۔۔

"آسٹریلیا کے وزیرِ داخلہ کے ایک بیان کے مطابق ہلاک ہونے والے زیادہ تر افراد کا تعلق افغانستان سے ہے تاہم ہمارے لیے بڑا مسئلہ یہ ہے کہ اس میں ہمارے کئی ایسے پاکستانی بھائی ہیں جنہوں نے سیاسی پناہ کے لیے اپنے آپ کو افغان شہری ظاہر کیا ہوا تھا۔"


عبداللہ ملک، پاکستانی ہائی کمشنر

شاہد کاظمی کا کہنا ہے کہ مرنے والے افراد کی لاشیں آسٹریلیا کے مختلف ہسپتالوں میں پڑی ہوئی ہیں تاہم ابھی تک یہ معلوم نہیں ہو سکا کہ ہلاک ہونے والوں میں سے کتنے پاکستانی ہیں۔

ترجمان نے بتایا کہ اس حادثے میں بچ جانے والے ستّر کے قریب افراد نے کرم ایجنسی میں اپنے عزیزوں کے ساتھ رابطے کیے ہیں تاہم کئی افراد بدستور لاپتہ ہیں جن کے رشتہ دار تشویش میں مبتلا ہیں۔

شاہد کاظمی کا کہنا تھا کہ ان کے ایک رشتہ دار سید مجاہد علی شاہ بھی کشتی میں سوار تھے لیکن ان کا ابھی تک اپنی فیملی سے کوئی رابطہ نہیں ہوا اور اس طرح دیگر کئی افراد بھی لاپتہ ہیں جن کے لیے ان کے عزیزو اقارب انتہائی بے چین ہیں۔

ترجمان نے بتایا کہ متاثرہ خاندانوں نے پولیٹیکل انتظامیہ کرم ایجنسی، منتخب نمائندوں اور کچھ بین الاقوامی اداروں سے رابطے کی کوشش کی ہے لیکن ابھی تک انہیں اپنے پیاروں کے بارے میں مکمل معلومات نہیں دی گئی ہیں۔

پارہ چنار کے ایک رہائشی محمود علی نے بتایا کہ ان کے ایک کزن محمد سلمان بھی اس کشتی میں سوار تھے جو بھی لاپتہ ہیں۔ انہوں نے بتایا کہ ان کے مطابق سلمان کی حال ہی میں شادی ہوئی تھی اور ان کے والدین اور اہلیہ انتہائی پریشان ہیں۔

محمود علی کے مطابق ان کے کچھ دیگر دوست بھی اس کشتی پر سوار تھے تاہم خوش قسمتی سے وہ اس حادثے میں محفوظ رہے۔

زیڑان پارہ چنار کے ایک باشندے فدا حسین کا کہنا ہے کہ ان کے چچا زاد بھائی سید مظہر حسین آسٹریلیا جانے کےلیے چار ماہ قبل انڈونشیا پہنچے تھے لیکن وہ بھی اس کشتی حادثے میں لاپتہ ہوگئے ہیں۔

خیال رہے کہ تقریباً دو سال قبل بھی بحر ہند میں کشتی الٹنے سے پچاس کے قریب پاکستانی ہلاک ہوگئے تھے۔ مرنے والے ان پاکستانیوں میں بھی اکثریت کا تعلق کرم ایجنسی سے تھا۔

بتایا جاتا ہے کہ آسٹریلیا میں پناہ لینے کے قوانین میں نرمی کی وجہ سے کچھ عرصہ سے پاکستان سے تارکین وطن بڑی تعداد میں وہاں کا رخ کر رہے ہیں۔ ان میں اکثریت کا تعلق ہزارہ اور اہل تشیع کمیونٹی سے بتایا گیا ہے۔

کشتی حامل پناهجویان در نزدیکی اندونزی غرق شد


به روز شده: 04:03 گرينويچ - چهارشنبه 27 ژوئن 2012 - 07 تیر 1391

مقام های استرالیا می گویند یک کشتی به همراه ۱۵۰ مسافر در نزدیکی اندونزی غرق شده است.

مقام های دریایی استرالیا می گویند این کشتی در ساعات اولیه روز چهارشنبه (۷ تیر) پیام های درخواست کمک فرستاده بود.


به گفته این مقام ها دو کشتی باری برای جستجوی مسافران در محل حادثه حضور پیدا کرده اند. دو کشتی نیروی دریایی استرالیا نیز راهی آنجا شده اند.

این دومین بار در روزهای اخیر است که یک کشتی حامل پناهجویان در نزدیکی جزیره کریسمس غرق می شود.

جمعه هفته گذشته نیز یک کشتی دیگر در این محل دچار حادثه شد. گروه های امداد موفق به نجات ۱۱۰ نفر از مسافران شدند و اجساد ۱۷ نفر از آنها پیدا شد.

کشتی که روز جمعه غرق شد، ۲۰۰ نفر مسافر همراه داشت. عملیات جستجو در ساعات پایانی روز شنبه خاتمه یافت.

پناهجویانی که قصد دارند خود را به استرالیا برسانند، معمولا با کشتی از نزدیکی جزیره کرسیمس عبور می کنند.

این کشتی ها اغلب مملو از مسافر هستند و موارد ایمنی در آنها رعایت نمی شود.

در سال های اخیر پناهجویان زیادی از کشورهای افغانستان، سری لانکا و عراق تلاش کردند خود را از طریق اندونزی به استرالیا برسانند.

در دسامبر ۲۰۱۰ حدود ۵۰ نفر جان خود را در سفری مشابه در نزدیکی جزیره کریسمس از دست دادند.

Anxious relatives are trying to contact Australian authorities


BY:DEBBIE GUEST
From:The Australian
June 27, 2012 12:00AM



A 28-year-old Iranian woman being held on Christmas Island says she and other detainees are 'so sad' over the mass drowning. Picture: Daniel Wilkins Source: The Australian


TEENAGE boys desperate to escape persecution in Afghanistan and Pakistan probably made up most of the 90-plus asylum-seekers who drowned off Christmas Island last week, it emerged yesterday, as police moved to identify at least three of the 17 bodies recovered.

Anxious relatives overseas are trying to contact Australian authorities for information on whether their loved ones are alive. Afghan man Raiz Hussain told The Australian from his home in the United Arab Emirates he feared his brother Asad, 25, was on the boat and might be dead.

Mr Hussain said his brother had been in Indonesia for 18 months and wanted to get on a boat to Australia; he had been unable to contact him since the disaster.

"Sometimes he was calling me from Indonesia and told us he wanted to go to Australia, and now his phone is switched off. I'm worried he was on this ship," he said. "When the boat was destroyed, his phone was switched off."


He said he and his brother were from Afghanistan, near the Pakistan border, and the threat from the Taliban made life dangerous and had forced them to leave.

On Monday, Pakistani Muhammad Essa contacted The Australian concerned about his 36-year-old brother Jabir Hussain.

Australian Hazara Federation spokesman Hassan Ghulam said four other families worried about Hazaras from Afghanistan and Pakistan had contacted him through friends in Australia.

He said one youth believed to be missing was 15 or 16 and he had heard through Brisbane's Hazara community that many more teenage boys were on board the boat and unaccounted for.

The boat was carrying about 200 people; only 110 survived.

West Australian police inspector Neville Dockery, who is leading the coronial investigation into the tragedy, said three of the bodies recovered were likely to be able to be visually identified. About 20 officers were continuing with the victim identification process and interviewing survivors yesterday.

News of the tragedy has swept through the island's detention centres. One Iranian woman in the island's family camp told The Australian she and fellow detainees were very upset. "We're so sad, we don't know who they are," said the 28-year-old woman, who did not want to be named.

"We're very worried it might be our friends, we're very worried about them and about everyone who comes this way."

The woman said she had made the journey to Australia from Indonesia with her brother and they had spent three frightening days at sea. "This is very dangerous. We were very scared," she said through the detention fence.

Two of four injured survivors were released from Royal Perth Hospital yesterday after being flown off Christmas Island on Friday and Saturday.

Living in fear



By Letter
Published: June 26, 2012



QUETTA: Syed Ali Mujtaba was killed on his way to donate blood and Aqeel Raza met the same fate while travelling to his university. Their only fault was that they belonged to the Shia Hazara community. As heart-rending as this state of affairs is for the community in Quetta, the criminal silence that has accompanied it is equally agonising. Perhaps, Shia Hazaras are lesser human beings because I really cannot figure out why we are being offloaded from buses and killed in cold blood, with not even women and children being spared. Yet, the media and the people of Pakistan seem to have more important issues to address, including the numerous ‘gates’ that are constantly hogging the limelight.

On June 18, a bus carrying Shia Hazaras was hit by a suicide blast, which killed five students and critically wounded many others. Not a single person involved in this or other attacks has been caught and punished and even if they are caught, they miraculously ‘escape’. Businessmen have abandoned their businesses, students cannot go to universities, colleges and schools, people cannot travel and are trapped in their homes. They have become despondent and are forced to leave the place they love most. Hundreds have drowned while on their way to Australia. They prefer death by drowning than to live every day in constant fear.

I am sure my dear, departed friend, Syed Ali Mujtaba, is in a better place now as he does not have to experience the pain caused by the death of friends and family members anymore. The city he loved has changed a lot. The mountains are not as friendly as they used to be and the valley has become bleak. Blood flows through the streets and the air is filled with sobs and screams. Roaming the city with him on a scooter and the trips to Askari Park and Hana Urak are just memories now. People don’t go on picnics anymore and spend their time remembering their loved ones. Everybody is waiting … waiting for their turn.

Saqlain Ali Changezi

Published in The Express Tribune, June 27th, 2012.

Quetta blast victim dies at CMH

Tuesday, June 26, 2012


QUETTA: Professor Muhammad Hussain of the Balochistan University of Information Technology Management and Sciences (BUITMS) succumbed to his injures at Combined Military Hospital (CMH) on Monday, taking the death toll of Samungali Road blast to six.

It may be mentioned that five students of the BUITMS were killed and 70 others, including policemen, women and children, were injured in the blast near FIA office last Monday.

Hussain’s body was handed over to his relatives for burial after legal formalities. “Three of the injured students lost their eyesight in the blast,” hospital sources said. staff report

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Doctors: 116 More Afghan Students, Mostly Girls, Poisoned

Posted Tuesday, June 19th, 2012 at 3:35 pm

Doctors in central Afghanistan say they are treating at least 116 Afghan students, mostly girls, after they became sick at school.

Health officials in Bamiyan province made the announcement Tuesday. For the past several weeks, hundreds of female students across Afghanistan have complained about noticing strange smells in their schools before becoming dizzy and nauseous and even fainting and vomiting in some cases.

Hospital officials in the province are investigating to see if any of the students show signs of having been poisoned.

No one has died in the incidents, and authorities have not found any traces of poison in the blood samples. Some experts suggest that a phenomenon called “mass hysteria” against the backdrop of Afghanistan's ongoing conflict could be behind the episodes.

But Afghan intelligence officials have accused the Pakistani military spy agency of being involved in the incidents. Pakistan has called the allegations “absurd and senseless.”

Other Afghan authorities have blamed the Taliban, saying they detained a group of people with insurgent ties after an incident in northern Afghanistan. However, Taliban officials have denied any involvement.

The Taliban in the past has been accused of targeting girls' schools with poison and acid attacks in an effort to close them down. Under the Taliban's rule, women were banned from working or going to school outside the home.

Taliban district chief arrested in Bamiyan province

By SAJAD - Sun Jun 24, 12:09 pm

According to local authorities in Bamiyan province of Afghanistan, Afghan security forces detained Taliban district chief in Saighan.

The officials further added Mullah Abdul Kabir was arrested by Afghan security forces along with some weapons and ammunition including 1 RPG, 2 missiles, 120 rounds of AK-47 and PK ammos, some explosive materials and 3 remote controls.

Provincial security media office chief Ahmad Aliyar said Taliban district chief Mullah Abdul Kabir was arrested after carrying out a failed suicide bomb blast to target Saighan district chief.

Mr. Aliyar further added Afghan security forces seized some documents from Mullah Abdul Kabir which shows he had conducted his classes in a religious school “Jame Ashhad-ul-Tawhid” in Peshawar city of Pakistan and was later send to Bamiyan province of Afghanistan.

In the meantime Mullah Abdul Kabir said a number of religious clerics of Afghanistan is also being trained in religious Madrasas in Pakistan.

He said he was elected as district chief for Saighan while he was being trained in Peshawar city of Pakistan.

Mullah Abdul Kabir also said Taliban group was being supported and organized by United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Pakistan’s Inter Service Intelligence (ISI) and 25 other Islamic and Western nations.

According to local security officials, this is the second time Afghan security forces arrest nominated Taliban leader in Bamiyan province of Afghanistan.

Afghan security forces arrested nominated Taliban provincial governor Mullah Burhanuddin for Bamiyan province last yet.

Taliban militants group yet to comment regarding the report.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Daily Times, the latest pen-killer of Shia Hazaras of Quetta – by Ali Muntaziri





Pakistan media usually promotes the agenda and discourse of military establishment.

Update/Editor’s note: Op-ed editor of Daily Times has now apologized and assured to be extra careful in the future. We appreciate this gesture and hope the mainstream media will publish factual and sympathetic articles on Shia Hazaras, one of the most persecuted and target killed community of Pakistan. The exchange on Twitter is reproduced in the comments section below.

********

Daily Jang’s long held stature as the military establishment’s top media ally has been thrown into jeopardy all of a sudden. There is a new candidate for the throne in town, albeit, new only in butchering facts and replacing them with outright fallacies. The victims are not new, however, it’s the Shia Hazaras of Quetta who find themselves on the receiving end of misrepresentation again.

But this is no minute propaganda, mind you, the article published in Daily Times today (written by Surat Khan Marri)is so replete with factual lies that it would have made Joseph Goebbels a very proud man.

A community besieged and terrorized at the hands of religious fanatics should normally expect some sort of solace from the educated elite of the mainstream press. I, for one though, have long let go such hollow expectations because the more one believes in the transparency of Pakistan’s electronic and press media (both Urdu and English press), the more likely are the chances for the person to end up in sheer bewilderment as to how such an insulting written piece finds its way into one of the leading newspapers in the country.


Surat Khan Marri, an ISI mole or an LeJ-Taliban operative?

What adds to my utter inconvenience is the fact that the writer of this outrageously unrealistic article claims to be a Baloch, whose community has always found an able supportive friend in Hazaras during the entire course of their struggle against the injustices that they have been targeted with. Read Mr. Surat Khan Marri’s written piece, then reread and then reread again, still, the search for a single instance of truth would prove futile. Quite contrary to the claims that Hazaras are the beneficiaries of the Balochs’ miseries is the reality that both communities continue to be the subjects of genocide at the hands of a ‘common enemy’.

Let me be blunt, the military establishment kills and abducts the Balochs and the military establishment kills Shia Hazaras, of course with the use of its strategic assets-LeJ- in this case. The Balochs and Shias (both Hazara and non-Hazara Shias) should counter this collective genocide together, any such notion that tries to create animosity between the two should be quashed left, right and center, be it one from a Hazara or a Baloch.

Let us start from today and from this piece of trash published by Daily Times. Whatever economical, educational and social progress the Hazaras have made while being in Pakistan is a testament to their hard work, dedication, patriotism, determination and willingness to move forward as a developing community unlike some others who have a sense of pride in sticking to their cave houses and guns and illiteracy. Anyone who puts pen to paper in order to repaint history with lies should be ashamed of oneself. While such attempts fail audaciously in tainting the glorious reputations of Shia Hazaras, they serve only to unveil the hatred and bias that exists within some people.

I don’t normally dwell into conspiracy theories, but the notion that the Military-Mullah-Media alliance is fully bent on pitting the local communities of Balochistan against one another is as legit as they come. On the one hand is the exceedingly naive assertion that majority of the terrorists of LeJ/SSP, killers of Shia Muslims (including Shia Hazaras), are local Balochs. While on the other hand are the nonsense claims linking innocent Shia Hazara youth with the assassination attempts on Sunni scholars. Most people might not discern the grave consequences of reactions once people of Balochistan start believing in these lies but allow me to state that disaster will ensue. As yet, though, sanity has prevailed and any such propaganda has been met with strong negative response on all fronts. May the truth seekers continue to emerge victorious from every battlefield.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Ending religious discrimination: ‘The tolerant majority needs to take charge’

By Our Correspondent
Published: June 23, 2012


" We will not respond to violence with violence. This is the lesson everyone needs to learn," Hazara community member Aftab Hussain. DESIGN: FAIZAN DAWOOD
LAHORE:

“Those who believe in peace and tolerance are a majority and must take charge of the country,” Justice (retired) Nasira Iqbal said on Friday.

Justice Iqbal was addressing a convention organised by the Peace and Tolerance Alliance (PTA) in collaboration with the Strengthening Participatory Organisation Pakistan (SPO-Pak) at the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) offices.

She said that Jinnah had dreamt of a Pakistan where all citizens would have equal rights irrespective of their religious affiliations.

However, she lamented that religious minorities had been deprived of rights in the country.

“We have to do more than putting the rights of minorities in the constitution,” she said. “We have to ensure that these rights are also upheld.”

She said the blasphemy laws were being used to persecute minorities and deprive them of their property.

“Most blasphemy cases are used to unjustly occupy land,” she said.

She said that a number of people that had served the country had belonged to religious minorities.

She praised the late Justice Alvin Cornelius as the most competent judge in the country’s history.

Mehboob Ahmed Khan, a human rights activist, said that a country which persecuted religious minorities through both unfair laws and social discrimination could not progress.

He said that the Jinnah’s dream was being mocked.

He recalled that Cecil Chaudhry and said he had put his Pakistani identity above his religious.

“He fought in wars to safeguard the entire country, not just Christians,” he said.

Amarnath Randhawa, a representative of the Hindu community, said that Hindus are one of Pakistan’s largest religious minorities. “We were promised a lot, from equal rights to respect,” he said.

He said that there were more than 500,000 Hindus in the Punjab. Most of their worship places had been unjustly occupied, he said. “We suffer at the hands of the majority in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan where the state religion promises security to religious places,” he said.

He said that educated Hindu girls were being forced to stay home for fear of forced conversions.

Aftab Hussain, a member of the Hazara community, said, “The silent majority needs to wake up and fight for the rights of the oppressed.”

He said that despite persecution, Hazaras had decided to fight their war peacefully.

“We will not respond to violence with violence,” he said. “This is the lesson everyone needs to learn.”

“Minorities must be brought into the mainstream to end social disparity,” Hussain said.

SPO regional director Salman Abid said that religious extremism had increased due to a weak democratic system. He said that the failure of political forces meant that the state had become party to religious discrimination.

The convention ended with PTA convener Samson Salamat putting forward demands that were unanimously adopted by the participants of the convention. These included ensuring that state policies and laws are free of religious discrimination, the blasphemy laws be ended and the curricula be revised to end discriminatory content.

Published In The Express Tribune, June 23rd, 2012.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Quetta horrors

Editorial

Thursday, June 21, 2012
From Print Edition

Quetta’s descent into a hell zone where there is no peace continues. Will the city ever find the calm that once existed there and which its people yearn for? We simply do not know. Certainly, there is no sign that this is going to happen any time soon. In yet another sectarian attack on Monday, claimed by Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a bomber targeted a bus carrying students of an IT institute of the city. Five were killed and at least 70 injured. Many of the students were Hazarwals. A large number of the injured are still in a critical condition. Tuesday saw protests in Quetta after a teacher said to be close to veteran Baloch politician Nawab Khair Bukhsh Marri was target-killed by ‘unknown’ persons. The blame and suspicions in this case have been directed towards the security agencies. Over the last few weeks we have had many meetings and conferences on the Balochistan issue and the collapse of law and order in the province. The matter also lies before the Supreme Court. There were talks of a conference involving all stakeholders in Balochistan. But nothing concrete has been done so far in this regard. The killings continue; blood spills again and again.

The police appear unsure if the bus was hit by a suicide bomber or by explosives planted along the road. In many ways this is irrelevant. The fact is that the groups behind the various kinds of violence need to be tracked down and their leaders brought to justice. There is no evidence at all that this is being done. Because of this negligence feelings of anger among the Baloch have risen to the extreme. Hazara and other nationalist parties in Balochistan have staged — understandably so — angry protests in the city. The Hazara community, targeted on both sectarian and ethnic bases, has strong grounds for complaint. Can anyone solve the maze that is leading Balochistan towards greater and greater chaos? Once more we have heard the usual words of regret from key officials. But such expressions will not bring back lives or halt the terrorists in their tracks. We keep hearing from the government that a plan for Balochistan has been worked out. We wonder why this is being kept a secret. Each day a new terror hits the province and makes matters even more difficult to manage while the government appears unmoved. This is the most frightening element of all.

Afghan academics fired for ‘offensive’ ethnic book

KABUL: Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Wednesday sacked four academics from a leading research centre over a book that sparked fury for reportedly insulting the Hazara ethnic group.

The head of the Afghanistan Academy of Science and three other scholars were dismissed and referred to the attorney general’s office for questioning, Karzai’s office said in a statement. The “Ethnographic Atlas of the Tribes of Afghanistan”, published recently, reportedly described Hazaras as liars, stubborn, violent and anti-Islamic, prompting outrage from Hazara politicians.

“The content of the book is grossly offensive and considered an insult to all the resident ethnicities and thus the entire Afghan population,” the statement quoted Karzai as saying. Hazaras make up an estimated 15 to 20 percent of the war-torn nation’s ethnically diverse population, and Hazara Shiite Muslims suffered brutal persecution under Taliban rule in the 1990s.

Karzai’s government is a delicate mix of the three main ethnic groups — Pashtun, Tajik and Hazara — and has ordered the book withdrawn from circulation. The publication led to fierce debates on television chat shows, and was condemned by Hazara lawmakers in parliament.

Haji Mohammad Mohaqiq, leader of the Afghanistan People’s Unity Party, one of the main Hazara political factions, condemned the book and called for the authors to be punished. Asadullah Sahdati, an MP from the Hazara-majority central province of Deh Kondi, condemned the book. “The book contains non-scientific contents, and in some parts is childish. We welcome the move by the president sacking those behind it,” he said.

However, he said he did not want to see the book banned. “I want this book to be circulated, distributed to all Afghans, especially to every Hazara, so they understand the situation and the (hostile) feeling towards them,” he said. “We’re proud of our ethnic group and welcome any academic research into it.”

Ethnic divisions have led to some of the most brutal conflicts in Afghanistan’s bloody history. The mountainous country’s total population is estimated to be between 24 to 35 million, but no census has been held since the 1970s due to three decades of war. afp

The colour of my blood


Mubashir AkramThursday, June 21, 2012
From Print Edition

The definition 2(b) of the word Callousness in Merriam-Webster dictionary reads: “feeling or showing no sympathy for others.” And this precisely is what describes the state of the majority in Pakistan toward the Hazara community in Balochistan.

They are more interested in “bigger issues” such as the Malik Riaz case, the disqualification of Yousuf Raza Gilani, NRO and loadshedding etc, as the patriotic and peaceful Hazaras are targeted systematically.

According to the leaders of the Hazaras residing in Quetta, there are a little over million ethnic Hazaras residing in Pakistan. Majority of them is concentrated in Quetta where their estimated population is around 450,000.

A vast majority of Pakistanis, and particularly Punjabis, do not know much about them. For them, they are population from some other planet and hence, perfectly ignorable - even if they are brutally killed.

Hazara as a community hovers around the middle and lower-middle class stratum and claim to have nearly 90 percent literacy rate. Though ancestrally peasants, hardly any Hazara in Pakistan is in agriculture. They choose becoming small traders, businessmen or prefer joining government jobs.

I have this very strong feeling that probably 90 percent of the Punjabi population would not know that General (r) Muhammad Musa, the commander in chief of the Pakistan Army from 1958 to 1966 was a Hazara.

He also governed West Pakistan from 1966-69 and Balochistan from 1985-91. A true son of the soil, he served his country with pride and left a legacy for his community, and Pakistan, to take pride even after 21 years of his death.

Hazaras’ plight is nerve-racking, really, and as these lines are being written, 783 Hazaras have been killed with thousands injured in Balochistan. Ninety-nine percent of the violence has been committed only in Quetta district. Their crime is that they belong to the Shiite sect of Islam and hence are direct targets of the sectarian terrorists operating with impunity in Balochistan.

They have been attacked in more ways than one could count: indiscriminate firing on the Moharram processions/imam bargahs, kidnapping and decapitation, random firing on their vehicles, targeted killed, identify-and-kill incidents in passenger buses, raids at their homes, storming their shops and burning them subsequently.
The degree-fame chief minister of Islamabad, err, Balochistan, Mir Aslam Khan Raisani, has essentially worked merely as an extension of what his party’s government has been: poor governance and political and administrative failure.
His critics and friends alike say that he prefers to spend most of his time in Islamabad, “shopping for shoes,” as Amir Mateen eloquently put on May 27, 2012 in The News.

He could be full of humor but he is empty of many things including political wisdom, administrative vision, the will to govern, creative thinking and most particularly working hard while considering Baloch “his people” beyond statements.
When would and how could this end? Governing Balochistan, 44 percent of Pakistan’s geographical mass, could be a problem but what about Quetta alone? Quetta has a population of 1.5 million and once was a sleepy little cantonment. No one truly pondered over the unruly and disorganised growth of this martial-town in all irregular directions possible. Now, it is a melting pot of all kinds of intrigues and forms of violence from local to international.

On June 9, 2012, Justice (r) Javed Iqbal, head of the judicial commission on missing persons, blamed “foreign agencies” for deterioration of law and order in Balochistan. My question is very simple: should we, the Pakistanis, ask the Martians to come and police Balochistan?

Quetta has a corps headquarter. The FC is omnipresent. Police is ruthless, and with full authority. Every other day we hear stories of the intelligence operators running amok, at will. We hear that the inspector general of FC, Maj-Gen. Ubaidullah Khan Khattak refuses to appear before the court and then getting away with it until now. A small-sized, restless capital city slipping out of the hands of the Pakistani state is shameful. More shameful is the absence of any coherent strategy to bring peace to the people living there.

Seeing the “performance” of the incumbent federal and provincial governments, I am tempted to say that they have failed themselves - and the people of Balochistan.

There could be any number of reasons, and conspiracy theories, but the fact remains: the PPP’s federal and provincial governments lacked the political wisdom and administrative will to control situation in Balochistan.

I fear the day when an otherwise peaceful Hazara community decides to shun peace and respond to violence. I fear the day when their youth would refuse listening to their community leaders and take things in their hands.
“I am tired of this violence and have lost many relatives. I do not have much reason to believe that the government would ever catch these terrorist. How do you want me to react and respond if the violence knocks at my door? What do you think the colour of my blood is?” an enraged Hazara friend said in a wounded voice.
I know, but do the government and the state apparatus know the colour of the Hazara blood? I doubt that they do!

Monday, June 18, 2012

Ary urdu khabrain 18 june 2012 Quetta: Blast hits University bus, 5 kill...

Forum for Secular Pakistan launched

Ammar ShahbaziMonday, June 18, 2012
From Print Edition

Karachi

Amid relentless chants of Allah-hu-Akbar coming from just yards away, a group of progressive lawyers and social activists launched ‘The Forum for Secular Pakistan’ (TFSP) at the Karachi Press Club (KPC) here on Sunday.
The TFSP is a group of like-minded people committed to fighting growing religious fanaticism and obscurantism and promoting the ideals of secularism. Senior politician Sherbaz Khan Mazari presided over the occasion.
Former law minister Iqbal Haider, read out a declaration signed by civil rights activists, lawyers and intellectuals from across Pakistan. In the statement, Iqbal said that the ideals of secularism were not alien to Pakistan. “The founding fathers of Pakistan were dedicated to the idea and wanted Pakistan to be a secular.”

Haider quoted Mohammed Ali Jinnah’s famous inaugural speech to the constituent assembly of Pakistan, where the founding father said “in the course of time Hindus will cease to be Hindus and Muslims will cease to be Muslims, not in the religious sense… but in the political sense as citizens of the state.”

“When we started this initiated, we felt that someone has to come forward and speak against the unchecked fanaticism that is gripping Pakistan,” said Hasil Bizenjio, a senior Baloch politician and vice president of the TFSP.
“Today, whereever we go, we find Taliban. We are too scared to speak in front of the Mullah’s gun, but somebody has to speak,” he said.“The basic principle on which Pakistan was created, that is, the right of the federating units to self determination, is essentially a secular idea,” read Iqbal Haider, as he nudged Bizenjo, who was sitting beside him.

Iqbal argued that when a nation tries to bind itself to a single idea or ideology, the remaining segments of the society become secondary. “Hence, those who associate themselves with the state’s ideology attain an unwarranted position in the society, which is unfair to the rest.”

“The preference,” he explained, “could be a religion or an ethnic group, or whatever dividing line one may chose”. Earlier, while welcoming the guests, Iqbal chose not to address the non-Muslim guests as minorities, saying that he believes the non-Muslims of the country are as much a part of the mainstream and have equal rights and are equal citizens of Pakistan.

“Today, wherever we look, we find people being massacred in the name of religion and ethnicity. The Hindus are being persecuted. The Hazaras are being killed. The Baloch are being massacred. This nation should have a heart,” said, Sherbaz Mazari. Mazari insisted to the host that he not be introduced to the audience as a ‘Sardar’.

As the conscientious citizens set out their alternative vision for Pakistan in the front-yard of the Karachi Press Club, just outside, a group of protestors had gathered holding posters of Aafia Siddiqui and chanting religious slogans.
The irony of the situation was not lost on the journalists, who later discussed it in hush-hush tones over tea.

Geo Reports-Quetta IT University Bus Blast-18 Jun 2012

Primary images (RT): Bomb Attack on IT University Bus, carrying Students

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Quetta Bomb Blast at IT University Bus

University bus carrying Hazara students were attacked by a remote controlled car bombing; 4 students reportedly killed and more than 50 injured.
 

کوئٹہ ، آئی ٹی یونیورسٹی بس کے قریب دھماکا،4طلباء جاں بحق


Updated 20 minutes ago

کوئٹہ … کوئٹہ میں آئی ٹی یونیورسٹی کی بس کے قریب بم دھماکے میں چار طلباء جاں بحق جبکہ چار پولیس اہلکاروں اور تیس طلباء سمیت 53افراد زخمی ہوگئے۔ زخمیوں میں چار خواتین طلباء بھی شامل ہیں پولیس کے مطابق آئی ٹی یونیورسٹی کی بس طلباء کو لے کر یونیورسٹی جارہی تھی کہ اچانک سڑک کنارے کھڑی گاڑی میں دھماکہ ہوگیا، دھماکہ اتنا زور دار تھا کہ اس کی آواز دور دور تک سنی گئی، دھماکے کے نتیجے میں یونیورسٹی کی بس کو شدید نقصان پہنچا اور اس میں سوار تقریبا تیس طلبا ء زخمی ہوگئے، دھماکے سے قریب میں موجود چار پولیس اہلکار اور پندرہ راہگیر بھی زخمی ہوئے، زخمیوں کو فوری طور پر سول اسپتال منتقل کیاگیا تاہم تین شدید زخمی طلباء راستے میں ہی دم توڑ گئے بعد میں ایک زخمی طالب علم اسپتال میں چل بسا، بعد میں دھماکے کے دس زخمیوں کوسی ایم ایچ اور سات کو بی ایم سی بھی منتقل کردیاگیا، دھماکے میں زخمی ہونے والے بارہ زخمیوں کی حالت تشویشناک بتائی جاتی ہے، دوسری جانب واقعہ کے بعد پولیس اور انتظامیہ موقع پر پہنچ گئی، سی سی پی او کوئٹہ میر زبیر نے میڈیا کے نمائندوں کو بتایا کہ لگتا ہے کہ دھماکہ ریمورٹ کنٹرول تھا جسے ایک گاڑی میں نصب کیاگیا تھا، بم ڈسپوذل اسکواڈ کے مطابق دھماکہ میں 40 سے 50 کلوگرام دھماکا خیز مواد استعمال کیا گیا، دھماکے کے نتیجے میں قریب میں ایک موٹرسائیکل اور رکشے کو بھی نقصان پہنچا ،واقعہ کے بعد آئی ٹی یونیورسٹی کے طلباء کی بڑی تعدادسول اسپتال پہنچ گئی اور زخمیوں کو اسپتال میں فوری امداد نہ دئیے جانے پر احتجاج کیا اور اسپتال کے سامنے جناح روڈ کو بھی بلاک کردیا، واقعہ کی مزید تحقیقات جاری ہیں، دوسری جانب پشتونخواہ ملی عوامی پارٹی، نیشنل پارٹی، ہزارہ ڈیموکریٹک پارٹی، ایم کیو ایم کوئٹہ زون، جماعت الدعوة سمیت مختلف سیاسی و مذہبی جماعتوں نے یونیورسٹی بس پر بم حملے کے واقعہ کی شدید مذمت کی ہے ، وزیراعلی بلوچستان نے بھی اس واقعہ کی مذمت کرتے ہوئے اس میں ملوث عناصر کو کیفرکردار تک پہنچانے کا اعادہ کیا ہے۔
Geo Urdu

Blast near IT university in Quetta kills 4, injures 52

By Web Desk
Published: June 18, 2012


About 40kg explosives were used in the remote-controlled bomb, planted inside a car which was parked nearby. PHOTO: FILE

QUETTA: At least four students died, while around 52 were injured when a powerful blast occurred near an IT university located in Jinnah Town of Quetta early Monday morning, Express News reported.

The bomb was planted inside a car parked nearby.

The blast occurred when a van carrying students to the university reached the campus.

According to Bomb Disposal Squad, about 40kg explosives were used in the remote-controlled bomb, planted inside a car which was parked nearby.

Four police officials were also injured as a police mobile passed by.

Capital City Police Officer Quetta said that the university bus was targeted in the attack.

The injured were moved to Combined Military Hospital (CMH) and Civil Hospital.

Police cordoned off Jinnah Town – a residential area in Quetta. The roadside blast left a 3-foot crater on the road.

Among the deceased, there were three students and one passerby.

Police and security teams have reached the site and an investigative operation is underway. Balochistan Home Minister Zafarullah Zehri also reached the blast site.

A rickshaw parked nearby was completely destroyed in the blast, while the buildings nearby received damages.

Quetta: Blast hits IT University bus, 3 students killed, over 50 injured





Staff Report

QUETTA: A bomb blast ripped through a bus of IT University Balochistan, killing three students and wounding over 50 others on Monday morning, SAMAA reports.

The explosion took place when a bus of Balochistn IT University was travelling through Samangali road area of the city, CCPO Quetta, Mir Zubair said. He said three students died on the spot while some 50 had been wounded.

The bus was carrying 70 students at the time of blast.

Police and rescue teams arrived at the scene and shifted the injured to Civil Hospital and Bolan Medical Complex were emergency was declared.

Medics confirm more than 50 students have been received injured at hospitals, of them seven in critical condition. Some passersby and children were also among those injured.

According to bomb disposal squad 40 to 50 kilograms of explosives were used in the blast, adding that it was planted in a car at roadside and detonated through remote-controlled. -- SAMAA

Mohaqeq: The so-called Afghan "Academy of Science" Must be Banned

Friday, June 15, 2012

Two rockets fired in Quetta

Saturday, June 16, 2012

QUETTA: Two rockets were fired from an unidentified location in the city. However, no loss of life was reported. Police said one of the rockets fell near General Musa College in Gulistan Town while the other landed in an open ground near a grid station. A spokesperson of the United Baloch Army, a banned organisation, phoned offices of certain media offices and claimed responsibility for the attack. online

In Afghanistan, bringing schools to those in need

Monday, June 11, 2012

Rain can't dampen a love for freedom for asylum seekers in Australia

EXCLUSIVE by Gemma Jones
The Daily Telegraph
June 12, 2012 12:00AM

Source: The Daily Telegraph


Two Afghani asylum seekers seeing the sights of Sydney. They are on temporary bridging visas / Pic: Craig Greenhill Source: The Daily Telegraph


AFTER arriving in Australia on a leaky boat, these two asylum seekers were given good food and accommodation at a Queensland detention centre - but nothing compares to the taste of freedom.

That was their opinion yesterday after enjoying their first week in a western Sydney family's house as part of the government's homestay plan.

The 22-year-old and 26-year-old Hazara men from Afghanistan are among the first to be housed by Australian families enlisted by the government as it grapples with its asylum seeker crisis.

Yesterday the men were taken on a driving tour of Sydney landmarks with their host family, including Michelle and her three foster children, who arrived as unaccompanied minors from Afghanistan.

Over the weekend they celebrated one of the foster boy's 18th birthday with a party at the family's Western Sydney home.

One of the asylum seekers, who cannot be identified, said he had suffered depression due to experiences in his home country and had struggled with life inside a detention centre in far north Queensland.

"It is good because we were in detention and we have experienced freedom so it is very exciting," the 22-year-old said.

"In detention we had good accommodation, good food but (no) freedom. In detention we had mental and health problems. We were very depressed."

Both men arrived on the same boat six months ago and claimed they were unable to carry their own documentation out of Afghanistan because they are Hazaras and were never issued with birth certificates.

Under a Coalition government they would have to prove they had not destroyed their documentation or face a presumption against refugee status.

The asylum seekers released into homes through the Australian Homestay Network have advanced in claims for protection and the asylum seeker said he looked forward to staying in Australia.

"We are looking for a safe place. We are looking for a place where we can live freely (and) can express our religion and our ethnicity," he said.

Michelle said she enjoyed having the asylum seekers. She receives $280 a week to house them but said she was not doing it for money.

Geo Reports-Quetta Blast-11 Jun 2012

Attack on guards of Haji Muhaqiq

Sunday, June 10, 2012

مستونگ بم دھماکہ، دو افراد ہلاک


آخری وقت اشاعت: پير 11 جون 2012 ,‭ 08:25 GMT 13:25 PST



بلوچستان کے علاقے مستونگ میں ریمورٹ کنٹرول بم دھماکے میں دو افرادہلاک اورچالیس زخمی ہوئے ہیں۔

دھماکہ اس وقت ہوا جب ایران جانے والے زائرین کی بس چند لمحے قبل وہاں سے گذرگئی تھی۔


کوئٹہ سے بی بی سی کے نامہ نگارایوب ترین نے بتایا کہ یہ واقعہ سوموار کے روز کوئٹہ سے ساٹھ کلومیٹرجنوب میں واقع ضلع مستونگ کے علاقے درینگڑ کے مقام پر پیش آیا۔

کوئٹہ سے ایران جانے والے زائرین کی ایک بس دھماکہ ہونے سے چند لمحے قبل گذری تھی۔ تاہم کوئٹہ سے نوشکی جانے والی مسافربس دھماکے کی زد میں آگئی۔ جس کے نتیجے میں دو افراد ہلاک اور چالیس سے زیاد ہ زخمی ہوگئے۔

دھماکے میں شدید زخمی ہونے والوں کو بولان میڈیکل ہسپتال کوئٹہ منتقل کردیاگیا جہاں بعض کی حالت تشویشناک بتائی گئی ہے۔

مستونک سے مقامی صحافی عطاء اللہ بلوچ کے مطابق کم زخمی ہونے والوں کوسول ہسپتال مستونگ منتقل کردیاگیا ہے۔

دھماکے کے بعد پولیس اور فرنٹئیر کور کے اہلکار موقع پر پہنچ گئے اور دھماکے سے تباہ شدہ بس کے ملبے کوہٹاکر کوئٹہ تافتان قومی شاہراہ کو ٹریفک کے لیے کھول دیاگیاہے۔

یاد رہے کہ اس قبل بھی کوئٹہ تافتان قومی شاہراہ پر مستونگ کے علاقے میں ایران میں زیارتوں کے لیے کوئٹہ سے جانے والے زائرین پر کئی حملے ہوچکے ہیں جس میں سے زیادہ ترحملوں کی ذمہ داری لشکرجھنگوی نے قبول کی ہے۔