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, October 17, 2012

Afghanistan's safest province falling prey to Taliban








By Jessica Donati

BAMIYAN, Afghanistan | Tue Oct 16, 2012 5:24pm EDT

(Reuters) - Violence is returning to what has long been the most tranquil region of Afghanistan, where fears of a resurgent Taliban are as stark as the ragged holes left by the bombing of two ancient Buddha statues in cliffs facing the Bamiyan valley.

Bamiyan had been seen as the country's safest province due to its remote location in the central mountains and the opposition of the dominant local tribe, the Hazara, to the Taliban, mostly ethnic Pashtuns who massacred thousands of Hazara during their austere rule.

But now, after 11 years of a NATO-led war against the Islamists, insurgents are edging back into the province, burying roadside bombs and striking at foreign and local security forces. Five New Zealand soldiers were killed in August.

The violence in a region that was a bellwether for NATO's Afghanistan strategy underscores how rapidly security could deteriorate across the country once foreign combat soldiers leave by the end of 2014.

Local people say the insurgent stranglehold is now so tight that the province is effectively cut off by road in all directions and safely reachable only by air.

"When there are no flights out of Bamiyan, I put myself in the hands of God and travel by car," says District Governor Azim Farid, now sheltering in the capital Kabul.

Adding to the despondency is a decision earlier this year by UNESCO, the United Nations cultural agency, to call off negotiations to rebuild the two ancient Buddha statues, destroyed by the Taliban over two weeks in 2001 because they offended religious fundamentalists. UNESCO cited funding constraints.

NATO-led coalition forces say the recent insurgent attacks in Bamiyan are a tiny fraction of overall attacks across Afghanistan, although it could represent an attempt by the Taliban to retake the initiative.

"There has been an increase, but to put it in perspective this accounts for 0.06 percent of the total enemy-initiated attacks in all of Afghanistan," a coalition spokeswoman said.

Until the attacks began to spiral in July, when nine Afghan police were killed in two bombings, Bamiyan was a NATO success story....Continue Reading... 

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

گفت و گو با سیما سمر، رییس کمیسیون حقوق بشر افغانستان


Geo Reports-Quetta Target Killing-16 Oct 2012

کوئٹہ، فائرنگ میں چار افراد ہلاک


آخری وقت اشاعت: منگل 16 اکتوبر 2012 ,‭ 07:12 GMT 12:12 PST


پولیس کے مطابق حملہ آور موٹر سائیکل پر سوار تھے

پاکستان کے صوبہ بلوچستان کے دارالحکومت کوئٹہ میں نامعلوم افراد کی فائرنگ کے نتیجے میں چار افراد ہلاک ہو گئے ہیں۔

پولیس کے مطابق منگل کی صبح سرکی روڈ پر نامعلوم افراد کی فائرنگ سے چار افراد ہلاک ہوگئے۔

ان افراد کا تعلق ہزارہ قبیلے سے ہے۔

حملہ آور موٹر سائیکل پر سوار تھے۔ حملہ آوروں نے کباڑی مارکیٹ میں دکان پر فائرنگ کی۔

یاد رہے کہ بلوچستان میں 2002 کے بعد بڑے پیمانے پر فرقہ وارانہ ٹارگٹ کلنگ کا سلسلہ شروع ہوا جس کازیادہ تر نشانہ ہزارہ قبیلے سے تعلق رکھنے والے افراد بنے جن کا تعلق شیعہ مکتبہ فکر سے ہے۔

ہزارہ قبیلے کی جانب سے ستمبر 2012 میں سپریم کورٹ میں ایک فہرست پیش کی گئی جس کے مطابق فرقہ وارانہ ٹارگٹ کلنگ کے واقعات اور بم دھماکوں میں قبیلے کے 7 سو سے زائد افراد ہلاک ہوئے ہیں۔

ان واقعات کے باعث ہزارہ قبیلے سے تعلق رکھنے والے افراد شدید خوف و ہراس میں مبتلا ہوگئے ہیں۔

2009 کے بعد کوئٹہ میں سنی مکتبہ فکر سے تعلق رکھنے والے علماء کی ٹارگٹ کلنگ کا بھی سلسلہ شروع ہوا اور اب تک پولیس کے مطابق 20 سے زائد علماء اور طلباء ٹارگٹ کلنگ اور بم دھماکوں کا نشانہ بنے ہیں۔

یہ واقعہ پاکستان کی سپریم کورٹ کے کوئٹہ میں بلوچستان کی صورتحال سے متعلق کیس کی سماعت کے تین روز بعد پیش آیا 
۔ سپریم کورٹ نے ان واقعات پر شدید تشویش کا اظہار کیا تھا۔

Monday, October 15, 2012

Four Hazaras gunned down in Quetta scrap market

By Web Desk
Published: October 16, 2012


Two men on a motorcycle opened fire on the deceased while they were present at the scrap market. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

QUETTA: Four members of the Hazara community were gunned down in the scrap market of Quetta on Tuesday, Express News reported.

According to Express News correspondent Irfan Rana, two men on a motorcycle opened fire on the deceased while they were present at the scrap market.

All four of them died on the spot, while their bodies were transferred to Civil Hospital.

Sectarian killings have taken a new toll; many extremist groups are taking advantage of the political vacuum created after the ruthless operation. Over 700 Baloch Hazaras have been killed in cold blood.

7 UN staffers injured in copter emergency landing

Posted on 2012-10-15 14:18:29

BAMYAN CITY (PAN): Seven UN employees were injured when the helicopter carrying them made an emergency landing in the central province of Bamyan, officials said on Monday.




The MI-8, with six foreign and 14 Afghan employees of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), made the emergency landing in the Sar Qul area of Yakawlang district.

UNAMA spokesman Nazifullah Salarzai told Pajhwok Afghan News the emergency landing took place on Sunday night due to a technical fault, injuring two foreign and five Afghan employees of the UN mission.

“We saw the helicopter crashing into a tree and falling in a potato field,” said a resident of the village, Hafizullah.

Security personnel were sent to the scene to take care of the wreckage, said the district chief, Abdul Ahmad Mubarez, who gave no further details of the incident.

Afghan Hazaras not deterred by tougher immigration laws


Michael Edwards reported this story on Monday, October 15, 2012 08:05:00
Listen to MP3 of this story (minutes)

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TONY EASTLEY: More than 500 asylum seekers arrived in Australia over the weekend and in Afghanistan ethnic Hazaras have told the ABC that tougher immigration laws will not deter them from paying people smugglers to get to Australia.

Hazaras are persecuted in Afghanistan and many have paid thousands of dollars to come to Australia by boat. They say it's worth spending the money and the time on Nauru for a chance to escape poverty and violence.

South Asia correspondent Michael Edwards reports from Kabul.

MICHAEL EDWARDS: War and persecution have forced hundreds of thousands of Hazaras out of the provinces and into Afghanistan's capital, Kabul. And on the streets they're quick to tell you they also want to get out of the country.

Many of them see Australia as the place to go.

HAZARA MAN (translated): Our people in Australia are happy. They accept us easily. There are more work opportunities.

MICHAEL EDWARDS: Tens of thousands of Hazaras have fled to Australia and many more want to come.

Feroza Qasem and her friend Zubaida Tahiri are two Hazara women living in Kabul. Lots of their friends have made the voyage.

ZUBAIDA TAHIRI: As we have heard, those who are there, they are happy from their life. That's why we would prefer Australia.

MICHAEL EDWARDS: They also want to go. They know the risks and they see people smuggling as a necessary evil.

FEROZA QASEM: I don't have that much money to pay. If I could find the money I will pay for going to Australia.

MICHAEL EDWARDS: Ramin Salik has a cousin in Jakarta waiting to get on a boat to Australia, courtesy of people smugglers, and he's saving up for the same journey.

RAMIN SALIK (translated): Yes, I am still looking forward and trying to go. I tried to go last year to find someone - a trafficker to get me to Australia. I will pay whatever it takes.

MICHAEL EDWARDS: The ABC has been told that rates for people smugglers range from $US10,000 to more than $US20,000.

The Australian Government has recently toughened its immigration laws by reintroducing offshore detention.

FEROZA QASEM: Yeah we know the rules become tough for refugees. Again, we want to go to Australia because our life is danger after 2014, we can't live, maybe Taliban come back.

MICHAEL EDWARDS: Zaheer Ali is a Hazara Refugee Advocate.

ZAHEER ALI: So people are very clearly looking for the betterment of their lives and I don't think so that any sort of action points by the Afghan government or any sort of action points by the Australian Government could stop asylum seekers going to Australia.

MICHAEL EDWARDS: Even those who have already tried and failed to get to Australia still want to come.

University teacher Abdul Ali got as far as Malaysia. He paid people smugglers there $20,000 before he was arrested by local police and deported back to Afghanistan. He knows it's tougher now but it's only made him more determined.

ABDUL ALI: I want to go again to Australia because the situation with security in Afghanistan is very, very bad for me and for those who are living in Afghanistan. Everyone wants to go there.

MICHAEL EDWARDS: To these people even life in a camp on Nauru is preferable to one of filled with violence and uncertainty.

TONY EASTLEY: South Asia correspondent Michael Edwards reporting from Kabul.