The Friday Times Logo
Pakistan's First Independent Weekly Paper
About Us Contact Us Login Subscription


 

TFT CURRENT ISSUE| March 02-08, 2012 - Vol. XXIV, No. 03

Search

Share

 

Advertisement

 

Hot Features

 

   
Audio Archive

 

Zulqarnain's Audio Archive


 

Artiste: 
Ustads Amanat Ali Khan and Fateh Ali Khan
Track:
Punjabi 'Qadar Na Jani
read more

 

 

Artiste:
Ustads Salamat Ali Khan and Nazakat Ali Khan
Track:
Raga Pahadi 'Saiyyan Bina Ghar'
read more

 

 

See full archive

Good Times

Insight By Dr Saleem Javed

Sectarian violence

In Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan, Hazara people continue to face discrimination and violence

 
 

A brief history of Hazara persecution

 
A refugee Hazara boy in the New Jalozai Camp
 


A bill in the US Congress that backs the Baloch "right of self-determination" days after a congressional hearing on Balochistan, and the emotionally charged reactions to these developments in Pakistan, both ignore the persecution of the Hazara community in the violence-hit province.

Analysts say the community is of no strategic or electoral importance to Pakistani leaders, and might be seen in the US as pro-Iran because it is Shia.

The Dari-speaking Hazara people live in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran, and are believed to be of Turk-Mongol descent. They are mostly Shia, with small Sunni and Ismaili minorities.



Hazaras in Afghanistan:

In a single incident in 1998, Iranian forces killed more than 630 refugees, mostly Hazaras, in the Safed Sang Camp detention center

According to Qaseem Akhgar, a prominent Afghan historian and political analyst, Hazara people have been living in Afghanistan for more than 2,000 years. Their persecution began after their land, the Hazarajat, was taken over by Amir Abdul Rehman Khan in the late 19th century. Hundreds of thousands of Hazara were killed, enslaved or forced to flee their homeland. Those who survived were persecuted by successive Afghan regimes. In 1933, a young Hazara highschool student Abdul Khaliq assassinated Nadir Shah, the king of Afghanistan, to avenge discrimination against his people.

The most recent spate of violence against the Hazara people began with the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan. They killed thousands of Hazaras in Bamiyan, Yakaolang and Mazar-e-Sharif with impunity from 1998 to 2001.

Hazaras in Iran:

The persecution of Hazaras began after their land was taken over by Amir Abdul Rehman Khan in the late 19th century

In Iran, the Hazaras are known as Khawaris, or Barbaris (barbarians), because of their phenotypic similarities with the Mongols. Most of them live in Mashhad, Turbat-e-Jam, Darrah Gaz and Nishaboor. Although a majority of Iranian population is Shia, the Khawaris are a marginalized community that has sought to protect their ethnic and cultural identity from state oppression. Iran also hosts a significant population of Hazara refugees from Afghanistan.

In a single incident in 1998, Iranian forces killed more than 630 refugees, mostly Hazaras, in the Safed Sang Camp detention center. A film about the incident was not shown in Afghanistan after what insiders call the Iranian president's "personal request" to his Afghan counterpart.


Hazaras in Pakistan:

Banned militant outfits have threatened to make Pakistan "a graveyard for the Shia Hazaras" and have asked them to leave the country by 2012

The Hazaras in British India were less marginalized and even joined the British army. In 1904, Major CW Jacob of the 126th Balochistan Infantry, who later became Field-Marshal Sir Claude Jacob, raised the 106th Hazara Pioneers with drafts from the 124th Duchess of Connaught's Own Balochistan Infantry and from his own regiment. They were a class regiment comprising eight companies of Hazaras. According to Hazara community leader Sardar Sa'adat Ali Hazara, "Among those who were recruited in various arms of the Indian Defence Services during World War II in 1939 was Gen Musa Khan. He later became the commander-in-chief of Pakistan Army, and was honoured for his services in the 1965 war against India."

Unfortunately, the persecution of Hazaras began in Pakistan in 1998 with the assassination of Gen Musa Khan's son Hassan Musa in Karachi. On July 4, 2003, 53 people died and 150 were hurt in a suicide attack on a Hazara mosque in Quetta. It was the first attack of its kind. Since then, more than 700 Shias, most of them Hazaras, have been killed in gun attacks, rocket attacks, mass killings and suicide bombings in Balochistan.

Banned militant outfits have threatened to make Pakistan "a graveyard for the Shia Hazaras" and have asked them to leave the country by 2012.

"The locations of the hideouts and training camps of the groups involved in attacks on Hazaras are not secret," Sardar Sa'adat said. "The government and the law-enforcement agencies seem to have no interest in protecting us."

The Hazara people are not allowed in certain parts of Quetta, including the Sariyab Road where Balochistan University is situated.

According to Asmat Yari, the president of Hazara Students Federation (HSF), "Almost 75% of Hazara students have quit the university and those who remain cannot attend classes because of fear." School attendance has also decreased by 10 percent this year, and college attendance by 25 percent. Parents do not let their children take exams in centers outside of the areas deemed safe for the Hazaras.

Thousands of young Hazaras have fled to Europe and Australia, often illegally, to escape the oppression. On December 20, 54 Hazara boys drowned when their boat sank near Java, Indonesia. Only seven bodies have been received so far. Another 23 Hazaras drowned near Malaysia on February 1.

"That the Hazara young men chose to leave Pakistan by taking such grave risks," the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan sad in a statement, "is a measure of the persecution the Hazara community has long faced in Balochistan."

Saleem Javed is a medical doctor by profession and a freelance journalist based in Quetta. He blogs at saleemjavid.wordpress.com and tweets @mSaleemJaved

 

Comments (9 comments)

Though, Iam not muslim but feel respect regarding Hazara community,wherever they are in the world, lord will have mercy and bless them tobe strong and success in their life. People who hates Hazara community, they are nothing but illiterate, terrorist minded and enemy of Islam.

Posted: Wednesday, March 27, 2013 by Brian from Usa

salam.....i am habibullah,son of haji muhammad essa.....i just read this all and i did not got it ... i read history of hazara....and there they write ..hazara people are turkic people....they leave in mongol......ect......still i dont no that who we are......we did not have the perfact history.....if we have so where it is......everyone just cal him changezi.....

Posted: Saturday, March 02, 2013 by habibullah from pakistan,quetta

good news.i am proud of you Dr saleem.

Posted: Wednesday, March 07, 2012 by haji munawar ali from quetta

No one is friend of Hazara. Everyone uses our community as slave and in their own benefits. Iran has nothing to do with Hazaras. They use it as Shia group to have its own interests in Pakistan and Afghansitan and other countries as well. Hazaras is attached with Iran because in Iran of the holly places and as Shia. But Fact is that Iran is never benefited Hazaras. The result is that every other community and religion is ignoring and discriminating Hazaras. Major Hazaras are bored of Iran to accept them as Friend but they are against Iran. Only those who receives Fund as Charity (Zakar or Khums) from Iran are favouring Iran.

Posted: Tuesday, March 06, 2012 by Mohammad Akbar Safdari from Kabul

Dear Salim Javed, It's really a true picture of the scenario you have portraited for hazaras in breif but a very big & davestating traumas in their dailly life. This is what the Pakistani government should come forward & admit the on going systematic genocide of Hazaras but this is not the case, their responsible officials always deny the fact. And Pakistan is a country where nobody seems to be honest enough to accept their mistake & are bigoted and hypocrate. When things get from bed to worse or even get beyond their control then they realise their mistakes & ignorance. Every now and then we come across of a very bezzare story, such as eating human flesh is a normal incident, robbers are the rulers is perfectly normal. Above all injustice, ignorance, envy, Intolerance and evils rule every sphere of life in Pakistan.

Posted: Monday, March 05, 2012 by Sadiq from Uk

It seems that the Hazaras people are well integrated in Pakistan, but the old brutal idealism of sectarian Mullah along with incompetence of the Pakistan government and Army to a degree has allowed the wholesale murder of their fellow citizens sans reason, and when the Hazaras pick up the weapons to defend themselves, what pray tell will be the result except for more bloodshed and a perpetual civil war.

Posted: Saturday, March 03, 2012 by Haider Abbas from United States

Dr Saleem Javed............................ sir......... thanx for youre suporting of Hazara history complete...

Posted: Saturday, March 03, 2012 by Aslam Reza ........ from Quetta

I salute you for your great work, may our prayers make you stronger. Don't let our pure bloods go wasted. May our innocence bloods prayers be with you brother. Ali hazara

Posted: Friday, March 02, 2012 by Ali hazara from denmark

Thank you Dr. Saleem for the very informative piece - Pakistanis should by now know and learn the difference b/w Hazara region and the Hazara people. We blame the Americans to be very self-obsessed and ignorant about the world. We Pakistanis are as much ignorant about our own people! Hazaras have fought for Pakistan in all wars, defended the skies of Lahore in 1965, the boundaries of Pak in 1965, the skies of Karachi in 1971, the mountains of Kashmir in 1999 and have also fought in the war against terrorism. On a per capita basis - Hazaras have suffered the most in the ongoing civil war in this country and yet they are loyal to this land. Have won accolades for this country in boxing, athletics, martial arts.... I hope the day is not far when this ugly infighting (ethnic & sectarian) ends and peace returns to this land!

Posted: Friday, March 02, 2012 by haider from Khi


 

 

Advertisement

 
 
 
 
 

Home     About Us     Contact Us     Online advertisement tariff     Archives     RSS Feeds     TFT reprints    Careers    Go Top

         

Copyright © 2011 by The Friday Times, Inc. or related companies. All rights reserved.