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, January 23, 2014

سانحہ مستونگ میں دہشتگردی کی نظر ہونے والے بہن بھائی کی کہانی

ہزارہ قبیلے کے عمائدین نے وفاقی وزیر داخلہ سے بلوچستان میں گرینڈ اپریشن کا مطالبہ کردیا


کوئٹہ( قدرت نیوز)وفاقی وزیر داخلہ چوہدری نثار علی خان ‘ وفاقی وزیر اطلاعات و نشریات سینیٹر پرویز رشید اور وزیراعلیٰ بلوچستان ڈاکٹر عبدالمالک بلوچ صوبائی کابینہ میں شامل وزراء کے ہمراہ جمعرات کی شب علمدار روڈ پر ہزارہ قبیلے کے عمائدین سے مذاکرات کیلئے امام بارگاہ نیچاری پہنچ گئے رات گئے تک ملنے والی اطلاع کے مطابق بات چیت کا سلسلہ کبھی کامیاب ہوتا کبھی ناکام ہوتا علاقے میں سیکورٹی کے سخت انتظامات کئے گئے تھے اور پورے علاقے میں چیمرز لگا ئے گئے تھے جس کی وجہ سے پرنٹ اور الیکٹرانک میڈیا کو کوریج میں شدید مشکلات کا سامنا کرنا پڑا واضح رہے سانحہ مستونگ میں جاں بحق ہونے والے 28افراد کی لاشیں ان کے لواحقین علمدار روڈ پر رکھ کر احتجاجی دھرنا دیئے بیٹھے ہیں مظاہرین کا مطالبہ ہے کہ بلوچستان میں گرینڈ آپریشن شروع کیاجائے اور ہزارہ برادری کو جو ایک منصوبہ بندی کے تحت ٹارگٹ کیا جا رہا ہے اس میں ملوث افراد کو گرفتار کر کے قانون کے مطابق سزا دی جائے پرنٹ اور الیکٹرانک میڈیا کو مذاکرات کے دوران امام بارگارہ نیچاری میں داخل ہونے کی اجازت نہیں دی گئی ۔


Ban ‘strongly condemns’ spate of deadly terrorist attacks in Pakistan




Polio vaccinators traverse floodwaters in Sindh Province, Pakistan, to reach children during a September 2012 immunization campaign. Photo: UNICEF/Asad Zaidi

22 January 2014 – Reiterating deep concern over continued terrorist attacks and sectarian violence in Pakistan, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today strongly condemned a spate of deadly violence in the country, including the bombing of a market earlier this week in Rawalpindi, and a series of attacks against polio workers.

In a statement issued by his spokesman New York, Mr. Ban deplored the bombing at a market in Rawalpindi on 20 January that left at least 13 dead, as well as yesterday’s attack in Baluchistan, Pakistan, on a bus carrying Shia pilgrims returning from Iran, which reportedly killed more than 20 people and injured many more, including women and children.

“The Secretary-General is also deeply concerned about the recent attacks on polio workers, which have resulted in several deaths,” the statement said, adding that: “These unacceptable attacks are hampering efforts to eradicate the disease in Pakistan, one of the last three countries where polio remains endemic.” The number of polio cases in Pakistan increased by 57 per cent last year, from 58 cases in 2012 to 91 in 2013.

“The Secretary-General expresses his heartfelt condolences to the Government and the people of Pakistan. He stresses the United Nations’ commitment to supporting the Government in its efforts to combat terrorism and violent extremism,” says the statement.

اپنے شہداء کے لیے آواز اٹھائیں کہیں اگلہ حدف آپ نا ہوں - بلاول بھٹو زرداری

Pictorial Report: Day 2 Sit-in Protest On Shuhada Chowk

















مجلس وحدت مسلمین اسلام آباد اور دیگر شہروں میں دھرنے جاری

Countrywide protests against Mastung bloodbath


DAWN.COM and SYED ALI SHAH

Relatives and mourners of Shia pilgrims who were killed on Tuesday by a bomb blast, protest sitting next to their bodies, in Quetta, Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2014.—AFP Photo

Updated 2014-01-23 07:44:05

QUETTA: The protests against the killing of Shia pilgrims in a bombing in Balochistan's Mastung district were observed across the nation on Thursday including Karachi, Quetta, Lahore, Islamabad, and Hyderabad, DawnNews reported.

The Majlis Wahdatul Muslimeen (MWM) staged protests in-front of the Governor House in Lahore and in Faizabad area of Islamabad.

Moreover, members of civil society staged a vigil outside the Press Club in the federal capital city earlier on Wednesday night.

Shia organisations also arranged protests at several locations of Karachi whereas the flow of traffic was blocked in Ancholi, Malir, Shah Faisal, Qayyumabad, Hino Chowk Flyover and Numaish Chowrangi areas.

Karachi’s chairman of the Private Schools Management Association, Sharaf uz Zaman, said that schools would remain closed today in those areas where roads were blocked.

Alamdar road protests

Despite freezing temperatures, thousands of members of the Hazara Shia community staged an ongoing sit-in in Quetta to protest against the killing of Shia pilgrims in a bombing in Balochistan's Mastung district.

The demonstrators gathered Wednesday morning at Alamdar road, vowing to continue their protests until authorities arrested the perpetrators of the attack.

A large number of women and children were also part of the demonstration.

The mourners have brought 26 dead bodies along with them and kept them on the road to press the authorities to launch a crackdown against the perpetrators of attack on Shia pilgrims in Balochistan's Mastung district.

“We will continue our protest until perpetrators of the blast are brought to book,” said Syed Ahmed Raza, a member of the Balochistan Assembly and leader of the Hazara Community.

He lamented that the killing of members of the Hazara community had become the ‘order of the day’ and that the Balochistan government had completely failed to protect the Shia pilgrims coming from Iran to Pakistan.

The banned militant organisation Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) claimed responsibility for Tuesday’s attack, which it described as a suicide bombing, and warned of more such attacks.

Officials said Wednesday that three more injured succumbed to their wounds from Tuesday’s blast on the bus bringing Shia pilgrims from Iran to Quetta. The deaths have raised the toll from 26 to 29.

An official at the Combined Military Hospital (CMH), requesting not to be named, said 26 bodies had been identified while one corpse was yet to be identified. He said 35 injured were under treatment at the CMH in Quetta. “The condition of seven injured is serious,” he said.

It was the second attack on Shia pilgrims in this part of Balochistan over the past three weeks; the first attack took place near Quetta on the eve of New Year.

Last year, thousands of mourners staged a three-day sit-in from January 10 to 13 in the aftermath of twin-bombings that had left over 100 people dead.

The minority community's protest had prompted the former Pakistan Peoples’ Party-led government to remove Chief Minister Nawab Aslam Raisani and impose governor's rule in Balochistan.

Meanwhile, Chief Minister Balochistan, Dr. Abdul Malik Baloch visited Alamdar Road on Wednesday and expressed his concern over the Mastung incident. He held a long meeting with members of the community to end their protest.

“We are all victims of terrorism and I stand by you in this hour of grief,” Baloch told the grief-stricken mourners.

Speaking to reporters, the chief minister pointed towards the presence of foreign militants in Balochistan. “The killing of Uzbek militants in Mastung shows that foreign militants have reached Balochistan,” he said.

Baloch claimed that his government was determined to wipe out terrorism despite all odds. Speaker Balochistan Assembly, Jan Muhammad Jamali, provincial ministers Dr. Hamid Khan Achakzai, Abdul Rahim Ziaratwal and others accompanied the chief minister.

But despite the assurances, the protesters appeared to be in no mood to leave the Shuhada Chowk till late at night. They had set up camps and collected firewood to brave the chilling Siberian winds...Continue Reading...