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.
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
Monday, October 3, 2011
کوئٹہ: فائرنگ سے بارہ افراد ہلاک
زخمیوں کو بولان میڈیکل کمپلکس منتقل کیا گیا۔
بلوچستان کے دارالحکومت کوئٹہ میں نامعلوم افراد کی فائرنگ سے بارہ افراد ہلاک جبکہ سات زخمی ہوگئے ہیں۔
بی بی سی کے نامہ نگار ایوب ترین کے مطابق منگل کی صبح نامعلوم افراد نے کوئٹہ کے مغربی بائی پاس پر اخترآباد کے قریب ایک لوکل بس پر اس وقت فائرنگ کی جب وین میں سوار افراد ہزار گنجی سبزی منڈی کی طرف جارہے تھے۔
فائرنگ سے بارہ افراد ہلاک اور سات زخمی ہوئے ہیں جنہیں فوری طور پر کمبائند ملٹری ہسپتال (سی ایم ایچ) لے جایا گیا ہے۔
فائرنگ کے اس واقعہ میں ہلاک ہونے والوں کا تعلق ہزارہ برادری اور شیعہ مسئلک سے ہے۔
واقعہ کے بعد پولیس اور سکیورٹی فورسز کی بڑی تعداد موقع پر پہنچ گئی تاہم فائرنگ کرنے والے چار ملزمان دو موٹر سائیکلوں پر فرار ہوگئے۔
موقع پر کوئٹہ پولیس کے سربراہ حسن محبوب نے کہا کہ شہر کی ناکہ بندی کر کے ملزمان کی تلاش شروع کردی گئی ہے۔
فائرنگ کے اس واقعہ کی ذمہ داری اب تک کسی گروپ یا تنظیم نے قبول نہیں کی ہے۔ گزشتہ ماہ مستونگ کے فائرنگ کے واقعہ کی ذمہ داری کالعدم تنظیم لشکرِ جھنگوی نے قبول کی تھی۔
گزشتہ ماہ کی بیس تاریخ کو بلوچستان کے علاقے مستونگ میں شیعہ زائرین کی بس پر نامعلوم افراد کی فائرنگ کے نتیجے میں چھبیس افراد ہلاک اور متعدد زخمی ہوگئے تھے جبکہ زخمیوں کو ہسپتل منتقل کرنے والی گاڑی پر بھی فائرنگ کی گئی جس میں مزید تین افراد مارے گئے تھے۔
BBC URDU
بلوچستان کے دارالحکومت کوئٹہ میں نامعلوم افراد کی فائرنگ سے بارہ افراد ہلاک جبکہ سات زخمی ہوگئے ہیں۔
بی بی سی کے نامہ نگار ایوب ترین کے مطابق منگل کی صبح نامعلوم افراد نے کوئٹہ کے مغربی بائی پاس پر اخترآباد کے قریب ایک لوکل بس پر اس وقت فائرنگ کی جب وین میں سوار افراد ہزار گنجی سبزی منڈی کی طرف جارہے تھے۔
فائرنگ سے بارہ افراد ہلاک اور سات زخمی ہوئے ہیں جنہیں فوری طور پر کمبائند ملٹری ہسپتال (سی ایم ایچ) لے جایا گیا ہے۔
فائرنگ کے اس واقعہ میں ہلاک ہونے والوں کا تعلق ہزارہ برادری اور شیعہ مسئلک سے ہے۔
واقعہ کے بعد پولیس اور سکیورٹی فورسز کی بڑی تعداد موقع پر پہنچ گئی تاہم فائرنگ کرنے والے چار ملزمان دو موٹر سائیکلوں پر فرار ہوگئے۔
موقع پر کوئٹہ پولیس کے سربراہ حسن محبوب نے کہا کہ شہر کی ناکہ بندی کر کے ملزمان کی تلاش شروع کردی گئی ہے۔
فائرنگ کے اس واقعہ کی ذمہ داری اب تک کسی گروپ یا تنظیم نے قبول نہیں کی ہے۔ گزشتہ ماہ مستونگ کے فائرنگ کے واقعہ کی ذمہ داری کالعدم تنظیم لشکرِ جھنگوی نے قبول کی تھی۔
گزشتہ ماہ کی بیس تاریخ کو بلوچستان کے علاقے مستونگ میں شیعہ زائرین کی بس پر نامعلوم افراد کی فائرنگ کے نتیجے میں چھبیس افراد ہلاک اور متعدد زخمی ہوگئے تھے جبکہ زخمیوں کو ہسپتل منتقل کرنے والی گاڑی پر بھی فائرنگ کی گئی جس میں مزید تین افراد مارے گئے تھے۔
BBC URDU
Dozen dead in fresh Quetta firing
QUETTA: At least 12 people were killed and seven seriously injured after unknown gunslingers riding motorcycles emptied their automatic weapons at a vehicle in Akhtarabad area of Quetta, Geo News reported.
Reportedly around 22 people on board a passenger bus came under fire on their way to Hazar Ganji from Quetta. It’s hard to establish the number of dead/ injured owing to scanty details, but casualties are feared to rise as some of the wounded are in critical condition.
Eyewitnesses say the gunmen stopped the bus, dragged some passengers down and shot them dead following which they opened indiscriminate fire on the bus making more kills.
Police have cordoned off the area and the dead/injured are now being rushed to Combined Military Hospital (CMH) as Bolan Medical Complex to which they were shifted earlier lacked emergency treatment facilities, said last reports.
The attackers made their escape before the police could arrive at the scene.
THE NEWS
Reportedly around 22 people on board a passenger bus came under fire on their way to Hazar Ganji from Quetta. It’s hard to establish the number of dead/ injured owing to scanty details, but casualties are feared to rise as some of the wounded are in critical condition.
Eyewitnesses say the gunmen stopped the bus, dragged some passengers down and shot them dead following which they opened indiscriminate fire on the bus making more kills.
Police have cordoned off the area and the dead/injured are now being rushed to Combined Military Hospital (CMH) as Bolan Medical Complex to which they were shifted earlier lacked emergency treatment facilities, said last reports.
The attackers made their escape before the police could arrive at the scene.
THE NEWS
VIEW: Sectarian violence —Anwar Syed
During the first several decades after independence, folks did not carry their religious belief on their sleeves. They took it in stride. A change in the thinking and feelings of many Muslims surfaced during General Ziaul Haq’s 11-year rule
A bus carrying 22 pilgrims destined for holy places in Iran was waylaid some 25 miles down the road from Quetta. The attackers pulled the passengers out, made them stand in a line, and shot them dead. Those killed belonged to the Hazara tribe whose members profess the Shia persuasion. Reports have it that more than 500 of them have been murdered in recent weeks, once again because they were Shia. No sense of outrage at this despicable event has been voiced in this country. It may be that the ordinary citizen has been so preoccupied with the turmoil in Karachi that he has had no emotional energy left to lament the fate of the Hazaras in Balochistan. There is probably more to the public reaction to these events than meets the eye.
Sectarian conflict is not foreign to our historical experience. There was rioting between the more passionate members of the Sunni and Shia communities occasionally even during British rule in India. But for the most part the two communities lived together peacefully in the same neighbourhoods one generation after another. The fact that one person was a Sunni and another a Shia did not stop them from building friendly and cooperative relationships. During the first several decades after independence, folks did not carry their religious belief on their sleeves. They took it in stride.
A change in the thinking and feelings of many Muslims surfaced during General Ziaul Haq’s 11-year rule (1977-88). He may have thought of himself as a pious Muslim and believed that as a ruler it was his duty to Islamise this country’s polity and society. But instead of implementing celebrated Islamic values and principles, he focused on its ritualistic aspects. His Wahabi piety notwithstanding, he went out of his way to use the name of Islam for prolonging and firming up his hold on power. He recruited the ulema (Islamic scholars) and “mashaikh” to support his rule, gave them stipends, invited them to conferences, paid their travel expenses, and placed them in expensive hotels in Islamabad. Under his influence the appearance of piety came to be expedient.
In this process he cultivated absolutism and extremism among those who stood with him. He told them, for instance, that secularists in Pakistan were snakes in the grass who must be located and crushed. This attitude of mind travelled beyond theological interpretations. It endorsed intolerance of the dissident in all areas of social interaction. Ziaul Haq went away to meet his Maker and earn what he deserved 23 years ago. In retrospect he is considered to have been the worst ruler that Pakistan has ever had. His encouragement of extremism and Islamic militancy may be one of the reasons for the poor rating that history allows him. But his legacy does not appear to have been entirely discarded. There are still quite a few people who are ready and willing to honour his creed. The damage that he did to the psyche of these people may have been enduring. When Zulfiqar Mirza says that Altaf Hussain wants to break up Pakistan and the latter’s spokesmen say that Mirza is a drinker of alcoholic beverages and is not to be trusted, when Nawaz Sharif calls Zardari a swindler, and Zardari calls PML-Q a bunch of murderers, they are all being extremists. Regretfully, one must say that absolutism and extremism have made a place for themselves in our political culture.
Sectarian conflict is not unique to our experience in Pakistan. The Catholic Church during the medieval age claimed absolute validity for Papal interpretations of doctrine and permissible practice and regarded any deviation from them as heresy. Certain reformers — notably Thomas of Aquinas, John of Salisbury, William of Ockham and Nicholas of Cusa — challenged the traditional view and asserted that Christian doctrine was open to reinterpretation. In the same vein, Martin Luther’s innovation gave birth to Protestantism, which in time gained many millions of adherents. But the Catholics maintained their original position. In Spain the agents of Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand killed every Protestant they could lay their hands on. Catholics and Protestants in Ireland remained engaged in bloody conflict that went on for more than a hundred years. White Anglo-Saxon Protestant Americans (WASPs) discriminated against Irish and Italian immigrants and their progeny until almost the middle of the 20th century. The fact that folks in Europe and the US have acted from religious prejudice does not mean that it is all right for us to do the same. Sectarian violence has diminished or disappeared in Europe with the spread of education and the coming of modernisation. All of this raises an intriguing question. Is there anything wrong with being certain that one’s own beliefs, to the exclusion of all others, are correct? It depends partly on the faith in question. Take the case of Hinduism. Some observers maintain that it is not a religion in the strict sense of that term. There is no dogma in which a person must believe in order to be a Hindu. A person is a Hindu if he says he is one and has found his place in the caste system. In a Hindu temple there may be many idols. It makes little difference to others if a man salutes this idol instead of the others. All is well so long as it is within the fold of Hinduism. A problem arises when a Hindu has to interact with some one who says he is a Muslim or a Christian. Tolerance and open-mindedness may then depart.
It seems to be the case that certitude is likely to inhibit togetherness among persons of different persuasions. It may give a man peace of mind, but having made peace with himself, he is ready to make war against those who will not agree with him. This inclination diminishes in the case of those whose thinking admits doubt and scepticism.
The writer, professor emeritus at the University of Massachusetts, is a visiting professor at the Lahore School of Economics. He can be reached at anwarsyed@cox.net
Daily Times
A bus carrying 22 pilgrims destined for holy places in Iran was waylaid some 25 miles down the road from Quetta. The attackers pulled the passengers out, made them stand in a line, and shot them dead. Those killed belonged to the Hazara tribe whose members profess the Shia persuasion. Reports have it that more than 500 of them have been murdered in recent weeks, once again because they were Shia. No sense of outrage at this despicable event has been voiced in this country. It may be that the ordinary citizen has been so preoccupied with the turmoil in Karachi that he has had no emotional energy left to lament the fate of the Hazaras in Balochistan. There is probably more to the public reaction to these events than meets the eye.
Sectarian conflict is not foreign to our historical experience. There was rioting between the more passionate members of the Sunni and Shia communities occasionally even during British rule in India. But for the most part the two communities lived together peacefully in the same neighbourhoods one generation after another. The fact that one person was a Sunni and another a Shia did not stop them from building friendly and cooperative relationships. During the first several decades after independence, folks did not carry their religious belief on their sleeves. They took it in stride.
A change in the thinking and feelings of many Muslims surfaced during General Ziaul Haq’s 11-year rule (1977-88). He may have thought of himself as a pious Muslim and believed that as a ruler it was his duty to Islamise this country’s polity and society. But instead of implementing celebrated Islamic values and principles, he focused on its ritualistic aspects. His Wahabi piety notwithstanding, he went out of his way to use the name of Islam for prolonging and firming up his hold on power. He recruited the ulema (Islamic scholars) and “mashaikh” to support his rule, gave them stipends, invited them to conferences, paid their travel expenses, and placed them in expensive hotels in Islamabad. Under his influence the appearance of piety came to be expedient.
In this process he cultivated absolutism and extremism among those who stood with him. He told them, for instance, that secularists in Pakistan were snakes in the grass who must be located and crushed. This attitude of mind travelled beyond theological interpretations. It endorsed intolerance of the dissident in all areas of social interaction. Ziaul Haq went away to meet his Maker and earn what he deserved 23 years ago. In retrospect he is considered to have been the worst ruler that Pakistan has ever had. His encouragement of extremism and Islamic militancy may be one of the reasons for the poor rating that history allows him. But his legacy does not appear to have been entirely discarded. There are still quite a few people who are ready and willing to honour his creed. The damage that he did to the psyche of these people may have been enduring. When Zulfiqar Mirza says that Altaf Hussain wants to break up Pakistan and the latter’s spokesmen say that Mirza is a drinker of alcoholic beverages and is not to be trusted, when Nawaz Sharif calls Zardari a swindler, and Zardari calls PML-Q a bunch of murderers, they are all being extremists. Regretfully, one must say that absolutism and extremism have made a place for themselves in our political culture.
Sectarian conflict is not unique to our experience in Pakistan. The Catholic Church during the medieval age claimed absolute validity for Papal interpretations of doctrine and permissible practice and regarded any deviation from them as heresy. Certain reformers — notably Thomas of Aquinas, John of Salisbury, William of Ockham and Nicholas of Cusa — challenged the traditional view and asserted that Christian doctrine was open to reinterpretation. In the same vein, Martin Luther’s innovation gave birth to Protestantism, which in time gained many millions of adherents. But the Catholics maintained their original position. In Spain the agents of Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand killed every Protestant they could lay their hands on. Catholics and Protestants in Ireland remained engaged in bloody conflict that went on for more than a hundred years. White Anglo-Saxon Protestant Americans (WASPs) discriminated against Irish and Italian immigrants and their progeny until almost the middle of the 20th century. The fact that folks in Europe and the US have acted from religious prejudice does not mean that it is all right for us to do the same. Sectarian violence has diminished or disappeared in Europe with the spread of education and the coming of modernisation. All of this raises an intriguing question. Is there anything wrong with being certain that one’s own beliefs, to the exclusion of all others, are correct? It depends partly on the faith in question. Take the case of Hinduism. Some observers maintain that it is not a religion in the strict sense of that term. There is no dogma in which a person must believe in order to be a Hindu. A person is a Hindu if he says he is one and has found his place in the caste system. In a Hindu temple there may be many idols. It makes little difference to others if a man salutes this idol instead of the others. All is well so long as it is within the fold of Hinduism. A problem arises when a Hindu has to interact with some one who says he is a Muslim or a Christian. Tolerance and open-mindedness may then depart.
It seems to be the case that certitude is likely to inhibit togetherness among persons of different persuasions. It may give a man peace of mind, but having made peace with himself, he is ready to make war against those who will not agree with him. This inclination diminishes in the case of those whose thinking admits doubt and scepticism.
The writer, professor emeritus at the University of Massachusetts, is a visiting professor at the Lahore School of Economics. He can be reached at anwarsyed@cox.net
Daily Times
Big London protest against Mastung killings
Murtaza Ali Shah
Tuesday, October 04, 2011
LONDON: More than a thousand protestors assembled outside the Pakistan High Commission here on Monday to condemn the killings of Shia Hazara tribe in Quetta.
It was the biggest demonstration ever held outside the Pakistan High Commission here on a working day. The protestors travelled from all major cities of the UK through coaches. Families, children, elderly and youth came together to condemn what they described as the ‘ethnic sectarian cleansing’ by Taliban affiliated militant sectarian groups.
Organised by Hazara International Forum of Great Britain, Hazara Organisation UK and their affiliate Hazara organisations, the demonstrators expressed their anger over the relentless attacks on the Hazara and the state’s almost complete capitulation to the murderous sectarian groups who have killed Shias all over Pakistan but with full impunity in Quetta.
They said the militants linked with Lashkar-e-Jehangvi and Sipah-e-Sahaba had distributed leaflets in the local area and had openly claimed responsibility for the latest cold-blooded murder of more than 25 Shia pilgrims who were on their way to visit the holy places in Iran.
The demonstrators blamed Interior Minister Rehman Malik and Balochistan Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani for treating the Hazaras with disgust and non-seriously. “The interior minister and the chief minister should tender their resignations,” they said.
A petition was presented before High Commissioner Wajid Shamsul Hasan in which the Hazara organisations blamed the government for ‘criminal negligence’, ‘racist’ and ‘discriminatory’ attitude towards Hazaras. It demanded a judicial commission under the supervision of a serving Supreme Court judge to investigate these killings and the victims of the target killings must be supported financially.
THE NEWS
Tuesday, October 04, 2011
LONDON: More than a thousand protestors assembled outside the Pakistan High Commission here on Monday to condemn the killings of Shia Hazara tribe in Quetta.
It was the biggest demonstration ever held outside the Pakistan High Commission here on a working day. The protestors travelled from all major cities of the UK through coaches. Families, children, elderly and youth came together to condemn what they described as the ‘ethnic sectarian cleansing’ by Taliban affiliated militant sectarian groups.
Organised by Hazara International Forum of Great Britain, Hazara Organisation UK and their affiliate Hazara organisations, the demonstrators expressed their anger over the relentless attacks on the Hazara and the state’s almost complete capitulation to the murderous sectarian groups who have killed Shias all over Pakistan but with full impunity in Quetta.
They said the militants linked with Lashkar-e-Jehangvi and Sipah-e-Sahaba had distributed leaflets in the local area and had openly claimed responsibility for the latest cold-blooded murder of more than 25 Shia pilgrims who were on their way to visit the holy places in Iran.
The demonstrators blamed Interior Minister Rehman Malik and Balochistan Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani for treating the Hazaras with disgust and non-seriously. “The interior minister and the chief minister should tender their resignations,” they said.
A petition was presented before High Commissioner Wajid Shamsul Hasan in which the Hazara organisations blamed the government for ‘criminal negligence’, ‘racist’ and ‘discriminatory’ attitude towards Hazaras. It demanded a judicial commission under the supervision of a serving Supreme Court judge to investigate these killings and the victims of the target killings must be supported financially.
THE NEWS
Australian Human Rights activist expressing solidarity with Hazaras
Mam!
We salute you on standing for rights of an oppressed people and hope other Human Rights activists will follow you...
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