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.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Quetta cops held for having links with banned outfits: DIG





QUETTA - Quetta Deputy Inspector General (Operations) Fayyaz Ahmed Sumbal on Monday said two cops had been arrested for providing weapons and other support to banned organisations.
Addressing a press conference at the CCPO office, the DIG said that Assistant Sub-inspector (ASI) Yahya and Constable Muhammad Karim were detained in connection with alleged links with the banned religious entities some days back.
“During the interrogation, they confessed to assisting banned outfits in carrying out sectarian attacks,” he said.
He said besides sharing information, the detained policemen also provided weapons and shelter to the members of the banned religious outfits.
When asked about the alleged involvement of police personnel in the easy escape of inmates from Cantt police station on Sunday, the DIG said that a case had been registered against six cops and investigation was underway.
"No one, whether in Police Department or outside will be spared if found guilty in the escape of two prisoners," he added.
Highlighting police performance in busting gangs of outlaws involved in heinous crimes, he said that during the last couple of months, a number of criminal rings were ruined, besides a special security plan for the provincial capital had helped a lot in maintaining peace in the city.
He noted that the accused allegedly involved in the kidnapping of former advocate general of Balochistan Salahuddin Mengal had been nabbed from Mastung and soon the missing AG would be recovered.- 

کوئٹہ، کالعدم تنظیموں کے ساتھ روابط،دو پولیس اہلکار گرفتار



May 20, 2013  | Posted by dailyqudrat

کوئٹہ(قدرت نیوز)ڈپٹی انسپکٹر جنرل پولیس کوئٹہ آپریشن فیاض احمد سنبل نے کہا ہے کہ پولیس نے کالعدم تنظیموں کے ساتھ روابط اور ان کے کارکنوں کو سہولیات اور معلومات فراہم کرنے پر 2پولیس اہلکاروں کو گرفتار کرلیا ہے یہ بات انہوں نے سوموار کو سی سی پی او آفس میں پریس کانفرنس کرتے ہوئے کہی انہوں نے کہا کہ پولیس نے اطلاع ملنے پر مذکورہ اہلکاروں سمیت دیگر عملے کی نگرانی شروع کی اورا ن کی سرویلنس بھی کی گئی جس کے بعد مکمل شواہد حاصل کرنے پر اے ایس آئی یحییٰ اور کانسٹیبل محمدکریم کو گرفتار کیا گیا جو کالعدم تنظیموں کے ساتھ مسلسل رابطے میں اور ان کے کارکنوں کو تمام معلومات اور کسی بھی کارروائی کے حوالے سے اسلحہ سمیت مکمل سہولیات فراہم کرتے تھے جس کے شواہد ہمارے پاس موجود ہیں دونوں اہلکاروں کو 3مئی 2013ء کو گرفتار کیا گیا ہے اس سے قبل ان کی مکمل نگرانی کی گئی تھی ان کے موبائل فون کے ڈیٹا سے بھی تمام شواہد حاصل کرلئے گئے ہیں انہوں نے کہا کہ دونوں اہلکاروں نے ابتدائی تفتیش کے دوران انکشاف کیا ہے کہ وہ کالعدم تنظیموں کے ممبران سے رابطے میں رہتے اور ان سے ملاقاتیں کرتے تھے کسی بھی واردات کے حوالے سے انہیں اسلحہ اور مدد فراہم کرنے سمیت ان کی رہائش کا بھی بندوبست کرتے تھے انہوں نے کہا کہ تفتیش کے دوران ان سے جو معلومات حاصل ہوئی ہے اس پر بھی کارروائی جاری ہے ہماری کوشش ہے کہ دیگر ملزمان کی گرفتاری کیلئے بھی عملی اقدامات اٹھائے جائیں ایک سوال کے جواب میں انہوں نے کہا کہ گزشتہ روز تھانہ کینٹ سے دو ملزمان کے فرار ہونے کے بعد6پولیس افسران کے خلاف مقدمہ درج کرکے انہیں حراست میں لے لیا گیا ہے اور2ٹیمیں تشکیل دی گئی ہیں ایک ایس پی طارق کی سربراہی میں مقدمے کی تفتیش کررہی ہے جبکہ دوسری خالد منظور کی سربراہی میں ابتدائی معلومات پر کام کررہی ہے اور ابتدائی معلومات کے مطابق ملزمان رات ساڑھے12بجے سے صبح4بجے کے درمیان فرار ہوئے ہیں انہوں نے کہا کہ گرفتار ہونے والوں میں ہیڈکانسٹیبل شامل ہیں ایک اور سوال کے جواب میں انہوں نے کہا کہ خود کش حملے کو روکنا ناممکن ہے لیکن اس کو مذکورہ ہدف پر نہ پہنچنے دے کر نقصانات کو کم کیاجاسکتا ہے اور ہماری کوشش ہے کہ سیکورٹی کے انتظامات کو موثر بنایاجائے آئی جی پولیس کی رہائش گاہ پر ہونے والے خود کش حملے کے حوالے سے پوچھے گئے سوال کے جواب میں انہوں نے بتایا کہ شہر میں لگائے جانے والے29خفیہ کیمروں میں سے 2کیمروں سے ہمیں موثر معلومات حاصل ہوئی ہے جس کے بعد تحقیقات جاری ہے اور تین تحقیقاتی ٹیمیں مختلف پہلوؤں پر کام کررہی ہیں ایک جوکہ دھماکے کے فوری بعد جائے وقوعہ سے ملنے والے انجن کے نمبر سے اس کو فرانزک ٹیسٹ کیلئے لاہور بھیجا گیا ہے جبکہ باقی ملنے والے شواہد پر بھی بقیہ ٹیمیں کارروائی کررہے ہیں سابق اٹارنی جنرل صلاح الدین مینگل ایڈووکیٹ کی عدم بازیابی سے متعلق پوچھے گئے سوال کے جواب میں انہوں نے کہا کہ کوئٹہ پولیس نے گزشتہ شب مستونگ کے علاقے میں چھاپہ مارکر ایک شخص کو گرفتار کیا ہے جس سے معلومات حاصل کرنے کے بعد آگے بڑھ رہے ہیں انہوں نے کہا کہ پولیس نے اغواء برائے تاوان کے بہت سے کیس حل کئے ہیں اور بہت سے مغوی تاوان کی ادائیگی کے بغیر اپنے گھروں کو واپس آئے ہیں کیونکہ پولیس آئے روز اغواء برائے تاوان کے ملزمان کے خلاف گھیرا تنگ کررہی ہے تھی انہوں نے بتایا کہ گزشتہ روز بھی تھانہ زرغون آباد کے عملے نے موٹر سائیکل چھیننے والے گروہ کے 2افراد کو گرفتار کیا ہے جنہوں نے 8وارداتوں کاانکشاف کیا ہے انہوں نے کہا کہ اسٹریٹ کرائمز اور موٹر سائیکل چھیننے کی وارداتوں میں گرفتار ہونے والے مختلف مقدمات میں پہلے بھی گرفتار ہوئے ہیں جو ضمانت پر رہا ہونے کے بعد پھر وارداتیں کرتے ہیں ایک سوال کے جواب میں انہوں نے کہا کہ گرفتار پولیس اہلکار مذہبی کالعدم تنظیموں سے رابطے میں تھے اور بڑی وارداتوں میں ملوث افراد کو 
سہولیات فراہم کرتے تھے انہوں نے کہا کہ گرفتار ملزمان سے تحقیقات جاری ہے مزید انکشافات متوقع ہیں۔

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Bamiyan was a safe haven in Afghanistan – but what now?

Even while it was protected by foreign troops, the magical province of Bamiyan was haunted by the memories of those killed in Taliban massacres barely a decade ago

Emma Graham-Harrison
The Guardian, Tuesday 14 May 2013 15.00 EDT


A New Zealand soldier in Bamiyan, Afghanistan. Photograph: Emma Graham-Harrison for the Guardian

The people of Bamiyan raged against Black Hawk helicopters swooping too close to the empty niches that once held their colossal Buddha statues, blown up the Taliban in 2001, because the choppers' thundering vibrations set off showers of the remaining fragments of mud and stones. By and large though they not only tolerated but welcomed the military base that until last month perched on the outskirts of their small town in the highlands of central Afghanistan.

"There are New Zealand soldiers, so there is no Taliban," said Ibrahim Chaman, a mobile phone seller whose father was killed by the hardline group over a decade ago. "When they leave, the Taliban for sure will return."

That affection made it an unusual, perhaps unique outpost in Nato's web of sprawling camps and fortified outposts across the country, often resented by the people they aimed to protect.

Its closure in April was equally singular, with New Zealand's governor general and what seemed like half the country's government flown out on a Hercules military plane from Dubai, to say goodbye to a valley that has firmly etched itself into the consciousness of the distant nation.

Commanders of other bases have kept their demise low-key, with troops slipping away into the night, sometimes leaving piles of debris behind. By contrast, the late afternoon ceremony in Bamiyan was packed with journalists. After solemn tributes to 10 fallen soldiers, the gathering dusk echoed with optimistic speeches from officials highlighting improvements in healthcare, agriculture and education brought by foreign troops and their cash, and the growing strength of local security forces.

But when the New Zealand, Malaysian and US flags were lowered, leaving the Afghan flag fluttering alone as darkness fell, there was a sense that shadows of a more ominous kind were also gathering over the quiet valley.

Bamiyan is a magical place, where the ghosts of long-lost power and opulence haunt a valley of spectacular natural beauty. Near the university lie the ruins of a citadel untouched since Genghis Khan sacked it in the 13th century, and although the giant Buddhas lie in fragments, frescos painted over a millennium ago still cling to corners of monastic caves that honeycomb the cliff around them.

It is also haunted by more recent spectres, memories of those killed in Taliban massacres barely a decade ago. Home to a heavily persecuted ethnic and religious minority, it has remained one of the safest places in Afghanistan, partly because the memory of that suffering fuels profound hostility towards the insurgency.

Mistrust of Afghans not from the local Hazara ethnic minority runs so deep that when the defence ministry was stationing troops across the country years ago, Bamiyan asked to go without. It is protected only by police, who in Afghanistan are usually recruited locally, and intelligence officers who will take over the New Zealand base.

That was fine when Afghanistan's insurgency was largely contained, Taliban fighters still focused on areas like Helmand, and Bamiyan was left to its peaceful existence. It was probably the only place in the country where diplomats wandered freely and met Afghans beyond blast walls and security checks that constrict embassy life elsewhere. Even soldiers visited spectacular historical sites in the area, confident they would not be targeted, unthinkable on any other base I have visited in Afghanistan.

So great was the sense of security that Bamiyan was chosen by Nato to be the very first place in the country where Afghan forces officially took over from foreign troops, although the ceremony in 2011 was just a nominal shift to pave the way for real changes this year.

But since then the insurgency has spread and violence lapped steadily closer to this virtual island of calm, isolated by mountain peaks rather than water. First one, then both roads to Kabul became a dangerous lottery. The head of the provincial council, a popular man who had done much to help development in a desperately poor area, was abducted and slaughtered in 2011. A US engineer is among the many others killed on the roads since.

The security of the province itself was next to crumble, with fighters pushing in heavily from the east but also testing boundaries to the west. Half of the New Zealand troops killed in combat during the decade-long mission died last August in the Do Ab area bordering Baghlan province, and their April departure was six months earlier than originally planned.

For those left behind, the threat is tangible. "I don't see any Taliban in Bamiyan, but when the foreign soldiers leave they will return and be strong," said Haider Mohammad, a 37-year-old who sold souvenirs to New Zealand troops for six years. Watching as preparations for the farewell ceremony got under way, he added: "When they go, I will leave as well."

On the base, there was almost an air of celebration after the handover. Soldiers barbecued a whole lamb and visitors clambered up a low blast wall for views to the niches where the Buddhas once stood. Gazing out at the starlit cliff that held the Buddhas, I remembered a man I had met in Bamiyan bazaar years earlier, infamous in the town because he had been forced as a prisoner to spend days stuffing dynamite into the giant statues. Blowing them up took days of hard labour, as other fundamentalists who had tried in vain years earlier found out. The Taliban were more persistent.

• This article was amended on 15 May 2013 because the original said New Zealand's head of state visited Bamiyan in April. This has been corrected to say governor general.

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Suicide bomber kills three in Quetta

By Web Desk
Published: May 12, 2013



PHOTO: FILE

A suicide bomber targeting IG Balochistan Mushtaq Sukhera killed at least three people in Quetta on Sunday evening, Express News reported.

Many were feared to be injured, including security officials.

Multiple rockets were also fired in the city shortly before the suicide blast.

The explosions were followed by heavy firing in the city.

The force of the explosions shattered windows of many buildings.

After the rocket attacks, many areas of the city were left without electricity.

Note: This is a developing story and will be updated accordingly.

Footage of Quetta Blast (Exclusive)

Casualties reported in Quetta blast near SAMAA TV office

Sunday, May 12, 2013 10:35:23 PM



Staff Report

QUETTA: Casualties were reported in a powerful blast near office of SAMAA TV located at Jinnah Road in the city late night, SAMAA reported Sunday.

Some sources said the blast ripped through a public gathering of Balochistan National Party-Mengal (BNP-M).

The blast occurred near SAMAA office located at Jinnah Road; the blast was so powerful that the panes of the office of SAMAA TV.

The blast caused harm to the SAMAA TV office and its belongings. The vehicles parked in the premises were damaged in the blast.

The explosion was followed by intense firing in the area.

Law-enforcers including police rushed to the blast site.

The nature and magnitude of the blast could not be ascertained as yet. There is also no immediate report regarding exact number of casualties. –SAMAA

Friday, May 10, 2013

Double challenge: Being Hazara & the first woman to stand in Quetta for NA


Pakistani candidate for national assembly for Pakistan Muslim League-Q (PML-Q) party Ruquiya Hashmi, waves to supporters during an election campaign meeting in Quetta.

Hazara Shia community members and supporters of Ruquiya Hashmi, carrying electoral posters as they take part in an election campaign meeting.
Hazara Shia community members and supporters of Ruquiya Hashmi, carrying electoral posters as they take part in an election campaign meeting.

Ruquiya Hashimi (C) talks to people during her election campaign corner meeting.
Ruquiya Hashimi (C) talks to people during her election campaign corner meeting.

A woman holds a poster of Ruquiya Hashimi during her election campaign rally.
A woman holds a poster of Ruquiya Hashimi during her election campaign rally.

People lean against a wall with posters of Ruquiya Hashimi and a painting of Pakistan's national flag outside her election campaign office.

People lean against a wall with posters of Ruquiya Hashimi and a painting of Pakistan's national flag outside her election campaign office.

Ruquiya Hashimi (front R) talks to people during her election campaign corner meeting.
Ruquiya Hashimi (front R) talks to people during her election campaign corner meeting.

By Agencies

Posted on: 10:50 pm | May 9, 2013

Ruquiya Hashmi, a doctor and a former soldier, faces a double challenge — as well as being Hazara she is also the first woman to stand in Quetta for the national assembly. For the past few days she has had threatening phone calls and letters sent to her offices. She is running for Pakistan Muslim League-Q (PML-Q), an ally of the outgoing government, but she is determined to stand up to the extremists. In the city that has become the epicentre for record sectarian bloodshed in Pakistan, Shia candidates are braving death threats to make themselves heard in Saturday’s election. – Photos and text by Agencies