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.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Rallies condemn killing of Hazaras in Pakistan

Saturday, October 8, 2011
By Sue Bolton, Melbourne
Hazara-led rally in Melbourne, October 1. Photo: indymedia.org.au
More than 29 Hazaras traveling on a bus near Quetta, Pakistan, were separated from other passengers and executed by Islamic fundamentalists on September 20. This was the third time Hazaras have been attacked in a month.

After hearing the news, more than 400 Hazara asylum seekers in Curtin detention centre protested the killings near the centre’s administration building on September 21. The protest was to alert the immigration department of the situation Hazaras face in Pakistan.

The Hazara community in Australia and around the world held protests against the killings with an international day of protest on October 1. Protests were held in Sydney, Melbourne, Perth, Darwin and Brisbane in Australia, and Stockholm, London, New York, Karachi, Islamabad, and Toronto.

Speakers at the Melbourne rally, where 700 to 1000 Hazaras protested in pouring rain, highlighted the silence of the Australian government and the UN on the killing of Hazaras in Pakistan.

Quetta has a large community of Hazaras who have fled persecution in Afghanistan. But most Pakistani are Sunni Muslim and the Hazaras, who are Shia Muslims, are increasingly the target of fundamentalist killings. Many of the Hazara asylum seekers’ families have been left living illegally in Quetta.

Hazaras are a minority group in Afghanistan. Historically, they have been persecuted and driven off their lands. Many have fled to Iran and Pakistan. Most Afghans that come to Australia for protection are Hazaras.

Lashkar e Janghvi, a fundamentalist Sunni militant group, claimed responsibility for the September 20 killings.

In June, it issued this warning: “Just as our fighters have waged a successful jihad against the Shia-Hazaras in Afghanistan, our mission [in Pakistan] is the abolition of this impure sect and people, the Shias and the Shia-Hazaras, from every city, every village, every nook and corner of Pakistan.

“Like in the past, [our] successful Jihad against the Hazaras in Pakistan and, in particular, in Quetta is ongoing and will continue [in the future]. We will make Pakistan their graveyard — their houses will be destroyed by bombs and suicide bombers.”

On August 31, on Eid (the Muslim holiday that marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan), Lashkar e Janghvi carried out its threat. It attempted a suicide bombing of a mosque in Quetta. They were stopped by Hazara community members, 11 of whom were killed, including a four-year-old girl and a 70-year-old man.

All Hazaras are targets — not just men, political activists or businessmen. Hazara women have been shot at on buses while going to the market and young boys are shot at on motorbikes by masked men.

The leader of Lashkar e Janghvi is free in Pakistan, making speeches against the Shia community, more assaults on Hazaras.

The Hazara community is deeply fearful that a genocide is approaching. Australian Hazaras are grieving for family members lost in the recent attacks and are asking their Australian friends to support them in condemning this violence against their people in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The Refugee Action Coalition Sydney (RAC) says the Australian government deported a Hazara man from Villawood detention centre to Pakistan on September 20 — the same day that Hazaras were massacred in Quetta.

RAC spokesperson Ian Rintoul said: “The man is not a citizen of Pakistan. And the immigration department ignored the very real dangers that confront the Hazaras in Quetta. The deported man’s son had been injured in a Taliban attack in May this year."

GREEN LEFT

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Pakistan Poochta Hai "28-09-11" Part 01

Activists Urge Australia Not to Deport Afghan Asylum Seekers

October 08, 2011

Phil Mercer | Sydney

Afghan refugees gather at a house in a suburb of Adelaide, Australia. (file photo)

Rights activists in Australia are criticizing the government's plan to repatriate Afghan refugees who fail to qualify for asylum. They say the government is downplaying the security risks in Afghanistan and thus are jeopardizing the safety of the asylum seekers being sent home.

Australian officials say Afghanistan has taken what they call "major steps towards democracy and stability." There are about 1,500 Australian troops in Afghanistan, and while officials in Canberra acknowledge that poverty and security issues remain a critical challenge, they insist that important progress has been made.

Some critics say the Canberra government is downplaying the security risks in Afghanistan. And they say that assessment has an impact on Australia's immigration policies regarding Afghan refugees.

The issue was a topic of discussion at a conference on Australia's Afghanistan policy hosted by the University of Technology in Sydney. Organizers there say that as a consequence of the government's assessment, Australia has reduced the number of protection visas it grants Afghan refugees. They say that in 2007, Australia granted visas to 95 percent of Afghans seeking asylum. Now, they say, fewer than half of such visa applications are approved.

Australia signed a deal with Kabul in January that allows Canberra to deport refugees who fail to gain asylum. So far, no one has been forcibly repatriated, but officials in Canberra will not say if or when deportations will begin. Professor James Goodman from the University of Technology questions the logic of such a policy.

“There are about 2,500 of these Afghan refugees, all of them still in detention," he said. "This agreement with the Afghan government would allow the Australian government to force them to return to Afghanistan and our concern was that clearly the security situation in Afghanistan is not improving. In fact, it is deteriorating over the last few years, deteriorating quite significantly year by year.”

The meeting of academics, students and human rights activists was held to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan that toppled the former Taliban government. The conference called on the Australian government to reconsider its policy on Afghan asylum to take into account what organizers characterized as a worsening security situation.

Among the speakers was Abdul Karim Hekmat, who arrived from Afghanistan ten years ago. He says members of his minority Hazara ethnic group are facing increased persecution at the hands of the Taliban and discrimination by the government. Most of the asylum seekers who apply to stay in Australia are from the Hazara group.

Abdul says any asylum seekers sent home would be at risk. “For those people who will be forced to return to Afghanistan, they will be deported in a danger zone and the Afghan government is not able to protect them, the returnees and the Hazaras will be targeted once they are returned to Afghanistan,” he said.

Immigration has become one of the most contentious issues in Australian politics largely because of a steady flow of unauthorized arrivals coming by boat in recent years. The Labor government’s proposal to send asylum seekers to Malaysia for processing was recently declared unlawful by the High Court.

Australia grants visas to about 13,000 refugees annually under various international treaties.

Voice of America

Pakistan Poochta Hai "28-09-11" Part 04

Pakistan Poochta Hai "28-09-11" Part 03

Pakistan Poochta Hai "28-09-11" Part 02

Kabul Protest against Hazaras in Quetta



مروز مردم هزاره کابل نیز بخاطر همدردی برادران شان که در مدت ها بدینسو در شهر کویته توسطه دشمنانI مردم بی دفاع ما هدف قرار می گیرند نیز تظاهراتی مسالمت آمیزی را راه اندازی کرده بودند که فلم کوتاهی از آنرا با شما دوستان شریک می کنم البته قابل یاد آوری است که در این گرد همائی قطع نامه ای را نیز برای اروگان های حقوق بشر و دول جهان خانم حبیبه صادقی بخوانش گرفت که می توانید آنرا در این کلیپ ویدیوی تماشا نموده استعما فرمائید