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, June 17, 2012
Saturday, June 16, 2012
Friday, June 15, 2012
Two rockets fired in Quetta
Saturday, June 16, 2012
QUETTA: Two rockets were fired from an unidentified location in the city. However, no loss of life was reported. Police said one of the rockets fell near General Musa College in Gulistan Town while the other landed in an open ground near a grid station. A spokesperson of the United Baloch Army, a banned organisation, phoned offices of certain media offices and claimed responsibility for the attack. online
QUETTA: Two rockets were fired from an unidentified location in the city. However, no loss of life was reported. Police said one of the rockets fell near General Musa College in Gulistan Town while the other landed in an open ground near a grid station. A spokesperson of the United Baloch Army, a banned organisation, phoned offices of certain media offices and claimed responsibility for the attack. online
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Monday, June 11, 2012
Rain can't dampen a love for freedom for asylum seekers in Australia
EXCLUSIVE by Gemma Jones
The Daily Telegraph
June 12, 2012 12:00AM
Source: The Daily Telegraph
Two Afghani asylum seekers seeing the sights of Sydney. They are on temporary bridging visas / Pic: Craig Greenhill Source: The Daily Telegraph
AFTER arriving in Australia on a leaky boat, these two asylum seekers were given good food and accommodation at a Queensland detention centre - but nothing compares to the taste of freedom.
That was their opinion yesterday after enjoying their first week in a western Sydney family's house as part of the government's homestay plan.
The 22-year-old and 26-year-old Hazara men from Afghanistan are among the first to be housed by Australian families enlisted by the government as it grapples with its asylum seeker crisis.
Yesterday the men were taken on a driving tour of Sydney landmarks with their host family, including Michelle and her three foster children, who arrived as unaccompanied minors from Afghanistan.
Over the weekend they celebrated one of the foster boy's 18th birthday with a party at the family's Western Sydney home.
One of the asylum seekers, who cannot be identified, said he had suffered depression due to experiences in his home country and had struggled with life inside a detention centre in far north Queensland.
"It is good because we were in detention and we have experienced freedom so it is very exciting," the 22-year-old said.
"In detention we had good accommodation, good food but (no) freedom. In detention we had mental and health problems. We were very depressed."
Both men arrived on the same boat six months ago and claimed they were unable to carry their own documentation out of Afghanistan because they are Hazaras and were never issued with birth certificates.
Under a Coalition government they would have to prove they had not destroyed their documentation or face a presumption against refugee status.
The asylum seekers released into homes through the Australian Homestay Network have advanced in claims for protection and the asylum seeker said he looked forward to staying in Australia.
"We are looking for a safe place. We are looking for a place where we can live freely (and) can express our religion and our ethnicity," he said.
Michelle said she enjoyed having the asylum seekers. She receives $280 a week to house them but said she was not doing it for money.
The Daily Telegraph
June 12, 2012 12:00AM
Source: The Daily Telegraph
Two Afghani asylum seekers seeing the sights of Sydney. They are on temporary bridging visas / Pic: Craig Greenhill Source: The Daily Telegraph
AFTER arriving in Australia on a leaky boat, these two asylum seekers were given good food and accommodation at a Queensland detention centre - but nothing compares to the taste of freedom.
That was their opinion yesterday after enjoying their first week in a western Sydney family's house as part of the government's homestay plan.
The 22-year-old and 26-year-old Hazara men from Afghanistan are among the first to be housed by Australian families enlisted by the government as it grapples with its asylum seeker crisis.
Yesterday the men were taken on a driving tour of Sydney landmarks with their host family, including Michelle and her three foster children, who arrived as unaccompanied minors from Afghanistan.
Over the weekend they celebrated one of the foster boy's 18th birthday with a party at the family's Western Sydney home.
One of the asylum seekers, who cannot be identified, said he had suffered depression due to experiences in his home country and had struggled with life inside a detention centre in far north Queensland.
"It is good because we were in detention and we have experienced freedom so it is very exciting," the 22-year-old said.
"In detention we had good accommodation, good food but (no) freedom. In detention we had mental and health problems. We were very depressed."
Both men arrived on the same boat six months ago and claimed they were unable to carry their own documentation out of Afghanistan because they are Hazaras and were never issued with birth certificates.
Under a Coalition government they would have to prove they had not destroyed their documentation or face a presumption against refugee status.
The asylum seekers released into homes through the Australian Homestay Network have advanced in claims for protection and the asylum seeker said he looked forward to staying in Australia.
"We are looking for a safe place. We are looking for a place where we can live freely (and) can express our religion and our ethnicity," he said.
Michelle said she enjoyed having the asylum seekers. She receives $280 a week to house them but said she was not doing it for money.
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