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Born Pakistani, he died a Hazara

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Born Pakistani, he died a Hazara - thenews.com.pk


QUETTA: Major Shafaat died a sad broken man. Abandoned by his institution. Betrayed by childhood friends. Forsaken by his hometown. His only fault was to have been born different. A man with a flat nose and chinky eyes. An ethnic Hazara.

He lived a rich childhood frolicking up and down the Quetta streets with his Baloch, Pashtun, Punjabi and Hazara friends from school. Ethnicity did not matter at all in those days. Friends were—well—just friends. He was lucky that he was able to fulfill his ambition to join Pakistan Army. There is a long tradition among his community to join army dating back to 1830s when Captain Jacob—of Jacobabad fame—recruited Hazaras for the First Afghan war. Musa Khan joined Hazara Pioneers Regiment in 1904 as a sepoy and rose to become Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff and West Pakistan Governor. Shafaat admired General Musa and Air Vice Marshal (Retd) Sharbat Changezi as his role models from his community.

Shafaat, now a major posted in Rawalpindi, volunteered to be posted to his hometown about three years ago. He thought he would be better off serving in Quetta—among dear friends and family. The city had changed drastically by then. He found his non-hazara bosom friends avoiding him. Some of them even showed hostility. “I felt it was just because I had a flat nose and chinky eyes like most descendants of Mongol Khan, “ he said visibly Irritated. Disheartened, he took a leave and got himself enrolled in Balochistan University’s Mass Communication Department. He found the antagonism there even worse. It was a double jeopardy: Pashtun students aligned to Sunni parties saw him as a Shia outcaste liable, as their posters suggest, to be killed; Baloch suspected him as an army infiltrator who had been sent to spy on them. Here is the heart-breaker: He was not trusted even by his army colleagues back at the Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) offices. He was kept out of the local intelligence loop. A new commandant had issued instructions not to let him see even the army’s movement roster. He was absolutely dismayed.

Shafaat shared his pain with me while we were traveling the length and breadth of Balochistan during one of my earlier visits there a few months ago. In all we spent about 62 hours together but now it appears like an entire lifetime. I had requested the ISPR to give me an attachment so that I could visit army’s remote outposts to get their side of the story. To my luck—came along Shafaat who was part journalist because of his Mass Communication degree. A highly sensitive soul, he was definitely way more knowledgeable and objective than your typical army officer. We travelled through Bolan Pass, Sibbi, Dera Allah Rar, Kashmore to Dera Bugti and back exploring some of the most explosive places in Pakistan. We had all the time during our long travels, sometimes 13 hours straight, to discuss Balochistan, particularly Hazaras.

We stopped by at Kolpur just outside the Quetta valley where, he told me, his ancestors had come as coal miners to escape the excesses of Afghan King Abdur Rehman in the 1890s. Kol means a cap in which they received their days’ earning and Pur means abode—hence abode of the cap-wielding people. Even today, a majority of Hazaras works on menial jobs as miners and labourers. We saw in Mach coal mines down the way that they remain as sturdy and hard working as they were a century ago.

Shafaat was constantly receiving calls from his family. He laughed that his wife and children were worried not because he was travelling to such dangerous areas but because they feared he might be targeted as a Hazara. “I don’t blame them,” I remember him saying, “such has been our life lately; I also fear the same every time my daughter goes to school or my wife goes to bazaar.”

Hazara are an easy target because they are easily distinguishable from the other ethnic groups because of their Mongol features. Over 700 Hazara Shias have been killed in the last decade.

As many as 39 Hazaras died in the last 19 days. Last September, religious processions organized by the community were targeted twice killing around 50 people. Then came the Mastung carnage the same month. It is not just the staggering number of Hazaras killed but the brutality that was shown by killers.

A bus carrying Hazara pilgrims to Quetta was brutally assaulted. All the 26 men and boys aboard were taken out of the bus, lined up and shot, as their mothers, wives and sisters watched from inside. Unafraid, the assailants had insured that the highway was blocked on both ends when they conducted that ambush. Two more Hazara men were killed after being dragged out of their cars at a traffic light in Quetta the same evening.The total death toll for the day was over thirty dead and scores more injured. It was mourning for almost every other house among roughly half a million Hazaras as most of them are related through marriages.

Shafaat said he too was sometimes seen as a suspect as many in the community blame the army. The argument goes that if the ISI can kill dump hundreds of Baloch, why cannot they get hold of a bunch of religious fanatics. “I am a suspect for me colleagues, my friends and my community,” he said sadly. His family wanted him to move to Australia. Thousands of Hazaras have moved to Australia and Canada in the last few years. Some take grave risks. Hundreds have died in containers, crossing borders, others in ship wrecks. Over 300 people died off the coast of Java last December, most of them Hazaras. So desperate are people from this cruelty that they are willing to take every risk to get out of here.

Shafaat was not the one to leave. He was too much in love with the Community that had held him in suspicion, the army that had disappointed him and Quetta that had scorned him. He was a proud Hazara, khaki as well as a Quettawal. Shafaat got a call while he was explaining his affection for the three. He turned suddenly pale. Another attack on Hazaras had taken place. Six were shot dead execution style while drinking tea at one of the many roadside stalls in Quetta. One of them was his relative. He almost fainted, sweating profusely. Being a small expert in cardiac symptoms, I could see it was serious. I got him a doze of aspirins and brain relaxants and requested him to “take it easy.” Obviously, he was very sensitive about the whole thing. On my way back I also talked to his family to keep him calm and away from such news.

I got a call from his number 15 days later. A big ‘hello’ came out of my mouth, without realizing that it was his daughter. “So where’s your dad,” I chuckled. “He died today,” she replied.

He was only 32. A noble honest man, but born with a flat nose and chinky eyes. Maybe he deserved to die because he naively believed himself to be a Pakistani. But in today’s Pakistan, he was just a Hazara.
 
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What killed Shafaat? Pakistani state - the Pakistani state that does not have the will to protect her citizens, Pakistani judiciary that does not have the will to exert itself in it's duty and the people of Pakistan, who have chosen parochial tribalism instead being Pakistani
 
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Whats the reason / background for such animosity ?
 
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This Hazara animosity has come up pretty recently AFAIK.

WHats the real reason?

I or anybody in my circle don't care whether the other guy is a Hazara, Baloch, SIndhi or whatever, as long he is a good guy and a good friend. I have had Urdu speaking, kashmiri, Balti, Baloch, Pathan friends.

SO what fuels this animosity, enmity?

There has to be a proper reason that some nutjob decides to stop a bus in the highway and kill some specific people.
 
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TRIBALISM, SECTARIANISM - and VANISHING STATE

Why do different tribes have to kill each other? For what gains?

Maybe because of lack of a job, money and such things that the state has to provide? Desperation? Poverty?
 
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Why do different tribes have to kill each other? For what gains?

Maybe because of lack of a job, money and such things that the state has to provide? Desperation? Poverty?

Review the article - when the state refuses to be effective in a creating a national society, it leaves people to fend for themselves and it becomes a all against all, when the state promotes sectarianism, it betrays it's DUTY under the constitution to treat all Pakistanis equally under the law. Army is an organ of the state.
 
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Review the article - when the state refuses to be effective in a creating a national society, it leaves people to fend for themselves and it becomes a all against all, when the state promotes sectarianism, it betrays it's DUTY under the constitution to treat all Pakistanis equally under the law. Army is an organ of the state.

So it becomes a 'Save your self' scenario and the state ignores it for their own petty benefits.

Like what started off as a political shenanigan of South Punjab province, has now turned into a catalyst for the different movements in Sindh, and Karachi is the playground for all these people.
 
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TRIBALISM, SECTARIANISM - and VANISHING STATE
Whats the reason / background for such animosity ?

@topic: Look around you How racial we are. Indians are one of the biggest racist (That include Pakistan and Bangladesh). After Independence India and Bangladesh tried to correct this flawed behavior and are successful to some extent, where as Pakistan never did try to eradicate it.

I will suggest you guys to go to your parent and ask him, how Pakistani were mocking/Insulting Bengali prior to 1971. They use to mock Bengali physical attribute.

I am bihari, I am dark and short What is my crime in it??? He was Hazara, with Mogoloid feature, what was his crime in it??? What is a mohazir's crime if he is dark and short???

Just because some of you guys are light skinned , big eyed, tall and handsom, you are not superior to us...


Pakistan need to bring serious law against racism.
 
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Wow that was a very sad read.

But I don't think it has got anything to do with racism, I remember reading somewhere that the local Pashtuns see them as enemy for having sided with their enemies(Brits and others) back in the days. And obviously they being Shia doesn't help.
 
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That was emotional...

I think he was a great man, this type of racism shouldnt be allowed
 
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Very sad story. Made my eyes moist...

Really difficult to fathom humans killing others without any apparent reasons.. be it in Pakistan, India or anywhere else...
 
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Criminals, gangsters, hired guns, mercenaries, terrorists, all will submit to law and order once the economy has improved and the infrastructure has been developed. A sad incident for a brave man. I wish he had settled in Punjab, as Punjab is probably the least racist and most accommodating.
 
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Ever since Wahabization of Pakistan, at the hands of the murderous Zia (a Punjabi) , Pakistan has seen a steady rise in sectarianism, intolerance and of course terrorism.

Yes, Zia being a pan-Islamist is responsible for the killings of Hazaras today. Maybe it's time for you to return to Pakistan and see what has happened first hand.

There are many wahabis living in Pakistan that don't indulge in this kind of criminal behavior. If you study Islam, if you are a Muslim at all, you will know this is not allowed.

What is a wahabi? Do you know?

Ignorant TT.
 
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