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, June 20, 2012

The colour of my blood


Mubashir AkramThursday, June 21, 2012
From Print Edition

The definition 2(b) of the word Callousness in Merriam-Webster dictionary reads: “feeling or showing no sympathy for others.” And this precisely is what describes the state of the majority in Pakistan toward the Hazara community in Balochistan.

They are more interested in “bigger issues” such as the Malik Riaz case, the disqualification of Yousuf Raza Gilani, NRO and loadshedding etc, as the patriotic and peaceful Hazaras are targeted systematically.

According to the leaders of the Hazaras residing in Quetta, there are a little over million ethnic Hazaras residing in Pakistan. Majority of them is concentrated in Quetta where their estimated population is around 450,000.

A vast majority of Pakistanis, and particularly Punjabis, do not know much about them. For them, they are population from some other planet and hence, perfectly ignorable - even if they are brutally killed.

Hazara as a community hovers around the middle and lower-middle class stratum and claim to have nearly 90 percent literacy rate. Though ancestrally peasants, hardly any Hazara in Pakistan is in agriculture. They choose becoming small traders, businessmen or prefer joining government jobs.

I have this very strong feeling that probably 90 percent of the Punjabi population would not know that General (r) Muhammad Musa, the commander in chief of the Pakistan Army from 1958 to 1966 was a Hazara.

He also governed West Pakistan from 1966-69 and Balochistan from 1985-91. A true son of the soil, he served his country with pride and left a legacy for his community, and Pakistan, to take pride even after 21 years of his death.

Hazaras’ plight is nerve-racking, really, and as these lines are being written, 783 Hazaras have been killed with thousands injured in Balochistan. Ninety-nine percent of the violence has been committed only in Quetta district. Their crime is that they belong to the Shiite sect of Islam and hence are direct targets of the sectarian terrorists operating with impunity in Balochistan.

They have been attacked in more ways than one could count: indiscriminate firing on the Moharram processions/imam bargahs, kidnapping and decapitation, random firing on their vehicles, targeted killed, identify-and-kill incidents in passenger buses, raids at their homes, storming their shops and burning them subsequently.
The degree-fame chief minister of Islamabad, err, Balochistan, Mir Aslam Khan Raisani, has essentially worked merely as an extension of what his party’s government has been: poor governance and political and administrative failure.
His critics and friends alike say that he prefers to spend most of his time in Islamabad, “shopping for shoes,” as Amir Mateen eloquently put on May 27, 2012 in The News.

He could be full of humor but he is empty of many things including political wisdom, administrative vision, the will to govern, creative thinking and most particularly working hard while considering Baloch “his people” beyond statements.
When would and how could this end? Governing Balochistan, 44 percent of Pakistan’s geographical mass, could be a problem but what about Quetta alone? Quetta has a population of 1.5 million and once was a sleepy little cantonment. No one truly pondered over the unruly and disorganised growth of this martial-town in all irregular directions possible. Now, it is a melting pot of all kinds of intrigues and forms of violence from local to international.

On June 9, 2012, Justice (r) Javed Iqbal, head of the judicial commission on missing persons, blamed “foreign agencies” for deterioration of law and order in Balochistan. My question is very simple: should we, the Pakistanis, ask the Martians to come and police Balochistan?

Quetta has a corps headquarter. The FC is omnipresent. Police is ruthless, and with full authority. Every other day we hear stories of the intelligence operators running amok, at will. We hear that the inspector general of FC, Maj-Gen. Ubaidullah Khan Khattak refuses to appear before the court and then getting away with it until now. A small-sized, restless capital city slipping out of the hands of the Pakistani state is shameful. More shameful is the absence of any coherent strategy to bring peace to the people living there.

Seeing the “performance” of the incumbent federal and provincial governments, I am tempted to say that they have failed themselves - and the people of Balochistan.

There could be any number of reasons, and conspiracy theories, but the fact remains: the PPP’s federal and provincial governments lacked the political wisdom and administrative will to control situation in Balochistan.

I fear the day when an otherwise peaceful Hazara community decides to shun peace and respond to violence. I fear the day when their youth would refuse listening to their community leaders and take things in their hands.
“I am tired of this violence and have lost many relatives. I do not have much reason to believe that the government would ever catch these terrorist. How do you want me to react and respond if the violence knocks at my door? What do you think the colour of my blood is?” an enraged Hazara friend said in a wounded voice.
I know, but do the government and the state apparatus know the colour of the Hazara blood? I doubt that they do!

Monday, June 18, 2012

Ary urdu khabrain 18 june 2012 Quetta: Blast hits University bus, 5 kill...

Forum for Secular Pakistan launched

Ammar ShahbaziMonday, June 18, 2012
From Print Edition

Karachi

Amid relentless chants of Allah-hu-Akbar coming from just yards away, a group of progressive lawyers and social activists launched ‘The Forum for Secular Pakistan’ (TFSP) at the Karachi Press Club (KPC) here on Sunday.
The TFSP is a group of like-minded people committed to fighting growing religious fanaticism and obscurantism and promoting the ideals of secularism. Senior politician Sherbaz Khan Mazari presided over the occasion.
Former law minister Iqbal Haider, read out a declaration signed by civil rights activists, lawyers and intellectuals from across Pakistan. In the statement, Iqbal said that the ideals of secularism were not alien to Pakistan. “The founding fathers of Pakistan were dedicated to the idea and wanted Pakistan to be a secular.”

Haider quoted Mohammed Ali Jinnah’s famous inaugural speech to the constituent assembly of Pakistan, where the founding father said “in the course of time Hindus will cease to be Hindus and Muslims will cease to be Muslims, not in the religious sense… but in the political sense as citizens of the state.”

“When we started this initiated, we felt that someone has to come forward and speak against the unchecked fanaticism that is gripping Pakistan,” said Hasil Bizenjio, a senior Baloch politician and vice president of the TFSP.
“Today, whereever we go, we find Taliban. We are too scared to speak in front of the Mullah’s gun, but somebody has to speak,” he said.“The basic principle on which Pakistan was created, that is, the right of the federating units to self determination, is essentially a secular idea,” read Iqbal Haider, as he nudged Bizenjo, who was sitting beside him.

Iqbal argued that when a nation tries to bind itself to a single idea or ideology, the remaining segments of the society become secondary. “Hence, those who associate themselves with the state’s ideology attain an unwarranted position in the society, which is unfair to the rest.”

“The preference,” he explained, “could be a religion or an ethnic group, or whatever dividing line one may chose”. Earlier, while welcoming the guests, Iqbal chose not to address the non-Muslim guests as minorities, saying that he believes the non-Muslims of the country are as much a part of the mainstream and have equal rights and are equal citizens of Pakistan.

“Today, wherever we look, we find people being massacred in the name of religion and ethnicity. The Hindus are being persecuted. The Hazaras are being killed. The Baloch are being massacred. This nation should have a heart,” said, Sherbaz Mazari. Mazari insisted to the host that he not be introduced to the audience as a ‘Sardar’.

As the conscientious citizens set out their alternative vision for Pakistan in the front-yard of the Karachi Press Club, just outside, a group of protestors had gathered holding posters of Aafia Siddiqui and chanting religious slogans.
The irony of the situation was not lost on the journalists, who later discussed it in hush-hush tones over tea.

Geo Reports-Quetta IT University Bus Blast-18 Jun 2012

Primary images (RT): Bomb Attack on IT University Bus, carrying Students

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Quetta Bomb Blast at IT University Bus

University bus carrying Hazara students were attacked by a remote controlled car bombing; 4 students reportedly killed and more than 50 injured.
 

کوئٹہ ، آئی ٹی یونیورسٹی بس کے قریب دھماکا،4طلباء جاں بحق


Updated 20 minutes ago

کوئٹہ … کوئٹہ میں آئی ٹی یونیورسٹی کی بس کے قریب بم دھماکے میں چار طلباء جاں بحق جبکہ چار پولیس اہلکاروں اور تیس طلباء سمیت 53افراد زخمی ہوگئے۔ زخمیوں میں چار خواتین طلباء بھی شامل ہیں پولیس کے مطابق آئی ٹی یونیورسٹی کی بس طلباء کو لے کر یونیورسٹی جارہی تھی کہ اچانک سڑک کنارے کھڑی گاڑی میں دھماکہ ہوگیا، دھماکہ اتنا زور دار تھا کہ اس کی آواز دور دور تک سنی گئی، دھماکے کے نتیجے میں یونیورسٹی کی بس کو شدید نقصان پہنچا اور اس میں سوار تقریبا تیس طلبا ء زخمی ہوگئے، دھماکے سے قریب میں موجود چار پولیس اہلکار اور پندرہ راہگیر بھی زخمی ہوئے، زخمیوں کو فوری طور پر سول اسپتال منتقل کیاگیا تاہم تین شدید زخمی طلباء راستے میں ہی دم توڑ گئے بعد میں ایک زخمی طالب علم اسپتال میں چل بسا، بعد میں دھماکے کے دس زخمیوں کوسی ایم ایچ اور سات کو بی ایم سی بھی منتقل کردیاگیا، دھماکے میں زخمی ہونے والے بارہ زخمیوں کی حالت تشویشناک بتائی جاتی ہے، دوسری جانب واقعہ کے بعد پولیس اور انتظامیہ موقع پر پہنچ گئی، سی سی پی او کوئٹہ میر زبیر نے میڈیا کے نمائندوں کو بتایا کہ لگتا ہے کہ دھماکہ ریمورٹ کنٹرول تھا جسے ایک گاڑی میں نصب کیاگیا تھا، بم ڈسپوذل اسکواڈ کے مطابق دھماکہ میں 40 سے 50 کلوگرام دھماکا خیز مواد استعمال کیا گیا، دھماکے کے نتیجے میں قریب میں ایک موٹرسائیکل اور رکشے کو بھی نقصان پہنچا ،واقعہ کے بعد آئی ٹی یونیورسٹی کے طلباء کی بڑی تعدادسول اسپتال پہنچ گئی اور زخمیوں کو اسپتال میں فوری امداد نہ دئیے جانے پر احتجاج کیا اور اسپتال کے سامنے جناح روڈ کو بھی بلاک کردیا، واقعہ کی مزید تحقیقات جاری ہیں، دوسری جانب پشتونخواہ ملی عوامی پارٹی، نیشنل پارٹی، ہزارہ ڈیموکریٹک پارٹی، ایم کیو ایم کوئٹہ زون، جماعت الدعوة سمیت مختلف سیاسی و مذہبی جماعتوں نے یونیورسٹی بس پر بم حملے کے واقعہ کی شدید مذمت کی ہے ، وزیراعلی بلوچستان نے بھی اس واقعہ کی مذمت کرتے ہوئے اس میں ملوث عناصر کو کیفرکردار تک پہنچانے کا اعادہ کیا ہے۔
Geo Urdu