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, May 10, 2012

Lawn tableau proves wheels of pluralism are well-oiled

May 11, 2012

OPINION



Slick campaign … olive farmer Richard Whiting makes his point alongside members of the Australian Hazara community outside Parliament House. Photo: Penny Bradfield

IT WAS a postmodern scene, one that either illustrates the marvellous pluralism of our democracy or speaks to the imminent and catastrophic decline of our entire civilisation.

It was hard to be sure.....Continue Reading...

BBC; Pakistan's Shias fear sectarian attacks



Pakistan's Shias believe the government is doing too little to stop the attacks

An increase in sectarian violence has killed hundreds of Pakistanis in recent years.



Poet Talib Hussain Talib talks about the attacks against the Hazara community in Balochistan

Many attacks have been concentrated in the Northern Areas and Balochistan province.

Shias and other minority communities say those behind the violence - such as the banned Sunni militant organisation Lashkar-e-Jhangvi - are rarely caught or punished.

BBC Urdu's Nosheen Abbas talked to Shias who have been caught up in the violence and have decided to move to the safety of Islamabad.... Continue Reading...

Sunday, May 6, 2012

BBC نقل مکانی پر مجبور ہزارہ برادری


Hazara man among 3 killed in Balochistan


Staff Report

QUETTA: A Hazara man was among three people killed in separate incidents of shooting in Quetta, Mastung and Hub areas of Balochistan on Sunday.

In the first incident, unidentified armed men gunned down a man in Dasht area of Mastung. According to levies, the man identified as Muhammad Ali was sitting at his tyre shop when the armed men, riding a motorcycle, opened fire on him. Resultantly, he received multiple bullet wounds and died on the spot.

Levies officials rushed to the spot and cordoned off the area. A levies official said the man belonged to the Hazara community and that it was a sectarian killing.

The Hazara Democratic Party has strongly condemned the killing of Muhammad Ali, saying that the government had failed to provide security to Hazaras.

Separately, a man was killed in Hub, an industrial township of Balochistan. According to sources, unidentified armed men shot dead Kuda Baksh in Goth Haji Murad area of Hub. Police rushed to the spot and body was taken to a nearby hospital.

A man was also gunned down in the Sariab Road area of the provincial capital.

Police said gunmen, riding a motorbike, opened fire on the man near Faizabad area while he was on his way home. He died on the spot. The body was moved to the civil hospital. The attackers managed to escape.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Complicated problem


by Javed Hafiz
Poor governance in Balochistan is a major issue

Quetta, the capital of Pakistan’s largest province, is a fascinating place. It is a frontier town with close ethnic and cultural links to both Iran and Afghanistan. The bulk of the city’s population is Pashtun, followed by the Baloch, the Brahvees, Punjabi settlers and the ethnic Hazaras, many of whom still speak Persian. There is significant military presence of corps strength and the famous Staff College is located there. So Quetta is a fairly cosmopolitan city with a bracing climate. This city has a special importance for my family as my wife was born in Quetta and calls herself a
Balochi.

Balochistan, traditionally a forgotten backyard, has been in the limelight of late and for negative reasons. It has seen three, some say five, military actions. In some districts, the situation is still turbulent. This province still hosts two million Afghan refugees and shadows of the current conflict in Afghanistan often lurk here. The wounds caused by Nawab Akbar Bugti’s death have not yet healed fully. Sectarian killings, which were alien to this tolerant city, have raised their ugly head. A couple of months ago, a US Congressman felt a sudden bout of “sympathy” for the Baloch people. All said and done, there is no denying the fact that Balochistan has a very strategic location.

I visited Quetta recently as a member of an NGO team. The purpose of our visit was to launch a report about the quality of democracy in Pakistan and to hold discussions with all stakeholders in this important province. The security situation in the city was tense and nine ethnic Hazaras were killed while we were there. Soon after the killings, we had a detailed meeting with the representatives of this community. The Hazaras are a wonderful people. They are enterprising in business and their literacy rate is higher than other ethnic segments. They have produced great soldiers like General Musa Khan. They are proud Pakistanis and can contribute a lot to the development of their province as they have the necessary skills.

In Balochistan, the Pashtun and Baloch populations were evenly poised. The arrival of millions of Afghan refugees, the bulk of whom are Pashtun from Kandhahar and its vicinity, has upset that fine balance. The killing of Hazaras too appears to be a corollary of the Afghan conflict as the Hazaras there are aligned with the Northern Alliance, against the Taliban. We could not venture much out of the Serena Hotel due to the security situation. Our meeting with Governor Zulfiqar Magsi was quite instructive. Having earlier served twice as chief minister, he is very knowledgeable about the province and its problems. A meeting proposed with Nawab Aslam Raeesani, the chief minister, could not materialise as he was out of town.

The problem in Balochistan is complicated and in some serious ways.The boycott of the 2008 elections by the nationalist parties has brought forth a second class and inexperienced leadership. Sixty out of a total of 65 members of the provincial parliament are ministers or advisers. There is no dearth of funds and each MP has been given 250 million rupees for development purposes. Then there is this very serious problem of missing persons. Chief Justice Chaudhary is in Quetta addressing this very issue as I write these lines. During a hearing of the case, he asked the additional chief secretary whether six MPs representing Quetta city had spent their funds honestly. As in rest of Pakistan, corruption is an issue here.

It was a time honoured tradition in this province to divide the top two political positions between the two major ethnic groups. For reasons best known to the rulers in Islamabad and Quetta, both the positions are now with the Baloch which is not ideal. Poor governance is one huge issue. The police is demoralised and bureaucrats below par and politicised. Vital development projects like the Gawader-Ratto Dero road have been inordinately delayed. This province, which can be the richest in Pakistan, is right now the poorest. The Pakistan Army has started a Cadet College at Sui which is a laudable project and needs to be replicated elsewhere.

Those who think there is a huge secessionist movement here are wrong. My impression is very different though, I must concede, the situation is far from normal. I would suggest that the president , prime minister and an important federal minister should visit Quetta every month. Development projects should be completed quickly. The issue of missing persons should be resolved with dispatch. The great Baloch people should be respected and not ignored. While in Quetta, I sincerely felt that many of its residents were better Pakistanis
than me.


Oman Tribune