Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Articles : Disappearances and extrajudicial killings continue unabated in Balochistan -- the civilian governments remain callously indifferent

During the first four months of the year 2013 no restraint was observed on the part of the military in their actions. Abductions by unknown persons, disappearances and extrajudicial killings continue unabated in the war torn zone of Balochistan province. During the months from January to April, according to the Voice of Baloch Missing Persons (VBMP), an organisation that compiles records of missing persons and extrajudicial killings, 244 persons were abducted, 11 recovered, 34 extrajudicially killed and 26 died during military operations in different parts of the province.
<a href='http://www.bygwaah.com/modules/editorials/article.php?storyid=29'>Bodies of evidence</a>
According to the Pakistan Medical Association, Balochistan Chapter, 32 doctors are missing and 28 doctors have so far been killed. In addition dozens of lawyers are missing and many have been extrajudicial killed after abduction. Besides this, generally there is no rule of law and any person can be picked up and killed for any reason.

However, a new situation has arisen in the policies of the law enforcement agencies in that they have extended their jurisdictions to other provinces. Today Boloch citizens are being abducted from Karachi, the capital of Sindh province, where they go for higher education.

The Baloch Students Organisation-Azad (BSO-A) is the target of supra constitutional forces. Students between the ages of 16 to 24 are kidnapped by persons in plain clothes and members of the Frontier Corps (FC). Two of them were extrajudicially killed, two were recovered with disabilities after continuous torture and two of them remain missing since January 2013.

Mr. Zahid Pazeer son of Haji Pazeer Baloch was abducted from Raees Goth Karachi on January 28, his mutilated body was found on March 10 along with another missing person, Abdul Rehman Baloch. Their internal organs, hearts, livers and kidneys had been surgically removed (harvested) most probably for sale.

Mr. Babu Iftekhar Baloch son of Mansoor Ahmed Baloch, a student, was also abducted from Raees Goth Karachi on January 28 by persons in uniform and plain clothes. He was a resident of Panjgur city, Balochistan. He was killed during the disappearance and his bullet riddled and torture marked body was found on March 6, 2013.

Mr. Ejaz Ghulam Baloch son of Ghulam Jan Baloch, a student, was abducted on January 24 from Dalmia, Karachi by persons in a jeep, which are generally used in Balochistan by agencies to abduct nationalists. Since then he has been missing and his whereabouts remain unknown. He was a resident of Panjgur, Balochistan.

Mr. Waseem Fazal Baloch son of Fazal Kareem Baloch, a student, was abducted by the agents of the state intelligence agencies from Raees Goth, Karachi, on January 28. His whereabouts remain unknown.

Mr. Aman Jan Baloch son of Sayyed Ahmed Baloch, a student, was abducted from Chitkan, Panjgur, Balochistan on February 22. He was kept in an unknown place in Karachi. He was eventually released by the captors but he is paralysed and cannot walk.

Mr. Shakir Baloch son of Mohammad Jan Baloch, a student, was abducted by plain clothed men in February, 2013 from Chitkan, Panjgur, Balochistan. He was kept in a torture cell in Karachi, he received injuries on different parts of the body and he also cannot walk properly.

Mr. Manzoor Ahmad Qalandarani was abducted from Gulshan-e-Iqbal, Karachi at midnight of February 8, he was a student of the Iqra University Karachi. He is the son of a tribal leader Mushtaq Qalandarani. It is worth noting that 30 of his relatives have also been abducted. Among them 15 were released but 13 remain missing while two of them have been extrajudicial killed.

It is believed that the increase in human rights violations is linked to the election process. The supra-constitutional forces remained busy in their attempts to sabotage the elections as they feared that the citizens of Balochistan would join mainstream politics. The most recent abductions and extrajudicial killings are seen as a warning to the Balochis to keep clear of the political arena and to deny them the fruits of democracy.

The Voice of Baloch Missing Persons has compiled a list of abductions and extrajudicial killings on a monthly basis. In the month of January, 2103 53 persons were abducted, one was recovered and nine persons were killed during military operations in different parts of the province. In February 54 persons were abducted, five were recovered, eleven mutilated bodies were found and eight persons were killed during military actions in different areas. In March 61 persons were abducted, among them five persons were recovered, eleven mutilated bodies were found and the rest remain missing. Seven persons were killed in military actions in different districts. In the month of April 69 persons were abducted, no one was recovered, six mutilated bodies were found and two persons were killed in military actions. It must be noted that the bodies recovered may not refer to those persons abducted in the same month.

Although the process of making a new civilian government has been completed in Balochistan there is no sign that the situation in that province will return to normal. In the presence of the military and paramilitary forces it cannot be imagined as to how they will coexist with democracy.

The Asian Human Rights Commission is appalled by the callous and negligent behaviour of the armed forces and the government of Pakistan with respect to the ongoing human rights violations in Balochistan and elsewhere targeting Baloch citizens. We urge the civilian governments to immediately halt the increasing armed interventions in Balochistan and start a comprehensive dialogue with all the factions and groups who are agitating against the country. Unless and until the military is completely withdrawn there will not be a solution to the conflict. The governments must take immediate action to recover all missing persons from Balochistan and ensure that compensation is paid to the families of those who were extrajudicial killed.

http://www.humanrights.asia/news/ahrc-news/AHRC-STM-110-2013

The british,Canadian,Swedish jihadhis who fight alongside Al qaida in syria slaughtering POWS

In the channel 4 News exclusive , British and other western jihadis fighter are shown in syria as never before.
http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid601325122001?bckey=AQ~~,AAAAAEabvr4~,Wtd2HT-p_Vh4qBcIZDrvZlvNCU8nxccG&bctid=2481792198001

Pakistani sponsor terririst Lashkar-e-Jhangvi.


لشكر جھنگوی كوئٹه میں کیوں متحرک ، زمستان بلوچ لشكر چنگیزی ( جھنگوی ) كب كهان اور کیوں بنا اس سے هم اور آپ اچھی طرح واقف ھیں ، ليكن يه تنظيم كب بلوحستان میں فعال اور متحرک هوا اس پر هم ایک مختصر جائزہ لیں گے ، سيف اللہ كرد جو آج كل كوئيٹه میں بیٹھ كر اس تنظيم كو لیڈ کررہے ھیں ، سيف الله كرد بلوچ قبائل كرد سے تعلق رکھتے هيں اور يه شحص 2007 میں کینٹ میں فوجی جیل میں بند تھا ، اس پر دهشت گردی کے کئ الزام تھے ، جب بلوچ تحریک نے انٹرنیشنل پزرائ حاصل كيا تو رياست نے اس کے چھره كو مسح کرنے کے لیۓ ایک مذھبی دهشت گرد تنظيم كو بنانے كا پلان بنایا تاكه بلوچستان کے غير مسلم آبادی كو نشانہ بن كر بلوچ تحریک كو مشکوک بنايا جاۓ تو اس کھیل كو شروع كرديا گیا اور سيف الله كرد كو ایجنسیوں نے جیل سے فرار كرا كر اس كو ایک تیار دهشت گرد تنظيم كا سربراہ بنایا گیا ، اور بلوچستان بهر منشيات پروش ملاؤن اور افغان جهاد کے غازيوں كو جمع کرکے انکو متحرک كيا گیا آج هم انکی بنیادی نظریہ اور مقاصد پر بات نهيں کرینگے ، مگر ایک تلح حقیقت يه كه لشکر جھنگوی کے آج مضبوط کیمپ جو ايف سی کے زير پرستی چل رھے ھیں اور حاران زعمران میں ایک حاص گروپ انکا حمایتی ھے ، اور انکو پاکستان کے علاوه سعودیہ عربيه اور بحرین سے مکمل فنڈک هورها ھے ، اور انکے وسيع نیٹ ورک کے شفيق مینگل اور جماعه الدعوه کے اچھے تعلق ھیں جبکہ مالک ريكی کے بعد انکا جنداللہ سے تعلق خراب بوگے ، اب انکے شیعہ كلنگ پالیسی میں تبدیلی کے ساتھ بلوچ نسل کشی كا اضافی چارج ديا گیا ھے ، اور اس گروپ کے چوٹے موٹے کئ گروپ سرگرم ھیں .

Profile: Lashkar-e-Jhangvi

Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) is one of Pakistan's most violent Sunni Muslim militant groups.
It takes its name from the late Sunni Cleric Haq Nawaz Jhangvi, who spearheaded the anti-Shia campaign which began in the country 30 years ago as a counter-movement to the Iranian Islamic revolution.
Mr Jhangvi was a founding member of Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP), a group blamed by many for introducing sectarian violence to the country.
Researchers say that the Islamisation policy introduced by Pakistan's former military leader, General Zia-ul-Haq, in the 1980s allowed the emergence of SSP in 1985.
The group resorted to violence against the Shia community almost immediately.
Path of violence The campaign got bloodier when a rival Shia group, Tehreek-e-Nifaz-e-Fiqah Jafferia (TNFJ) challenged it, resulting in the deaths of the top leaders of both sectarian groups, including Mr Jhangvi.
Within a decade the conflict led to fissures within the SSP and in 1996 LeJ broke away under the leadership of Riaz Basra.
He wanted to continue on the path of violence against Shias and rejected a call from other Sunni militant leaders to join mainstream politics and scale down attacks.
Calling themselves "Jhangvi" loyalists, the Lej - or Army of Jhangvi - began allying itself with the Taliban movement which was just taking over in Afghanistan.
Both the Taliban and the LeJ belong to the same orthodox, puritanical Deobandi tradition of Islam associated with the Islamic revivalist movement in the region.
The connection helped Mr Basra and his group to seek refuge in Afghanistan.
Government intelligence agencies have pointed to several LeJ militant training camps in Afghanistan. These camps were used not only to train anti-Shia militants but also as safe havens for Pakistani criminals and militants.
In August 2001, Pakistan's military leader General Pervez Musharraf banned a number of militant organisations, with LeJ top of the list.
In May 2002 Riaz Basra was killed, and analysts believe that the group began to develop links with Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda network.
Such fears were proved right when investigators found links between LeJ relating to three 2007 incidents in Pakistan which were all blamed jointly on al-Qaeda and the LeJ.
These included the kidnapping and beheading of US Journalist Daniel Pearl, an attack on French engineers in Karachi and a bomb attack on an Islamabad church.

 




 

Quetta university shut after attacks.

 Weeping relatives gathered to identify the charred remains of loved ones killed in a double attack in Pakistan"s troubled southwest claimed by a

The women's university at the centre of Saturday's deadly twin attacks in the Pakistani city of Quetta has been shut down until further notice.
In the first incident a bomb on a university bus killed 14 women. Gunmen then killed 11 when they laid siege to the hospital treating the wounded.
Sardar Bahadur Khan University is the only all-female university in troubled Balochistan province.
The move is seen as a safety precaution in a city which has seen many attacks.
The site of the five-hour gun battle that unfolded after the bus bombing, the sprawling Bolan Medical Complex in Quetta, has also been closed indefinitely.

Profile of lashkar-e-Jhangvi : http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-20982987


  
Profile of Lashkar a jangvi http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-20982987
An extremist Sunni group, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, has said it carried out both attacks. A spokesperson for the group said a female suicide bomber had been used to target the university students.
Although police now say they have found the severed head of a woman from the scene, they say the investigation is continuing to see if this really was a suicide attack.
Correspondents say that the use of women as suicide bombers in Pakistan has been rare.
On Sunday, Quetta observed an official day of mourning but Monday saw yet more groups, such as the Balochistan Bar Association, declare a strike to mourn the attacks.
Saturday's bloodshed began when a bomb exploded on a bus carrying students at Sardar Bahadur Khan Women's University.
When survivors were brought to the medical centre, militants stormed the building and started shooting indiscriminately.
The battle between the militants and security forces left nurses, security personnel and a senior city official among the dead.
Four attackers were also killed and one arrested, officials say.
Quetta, a city of 900,000 people in the south-west of the country, has long been troubled by violence mainly targeting the Shia Muslim minority, often claimed by groups such as Laskar-e-Jhangvi.
In January at least 81 people, mainly Shia Muslims, were killed in a bomb attack on a snooker hall in the city. And in February almost 90 died when a bomb ripped through a marketplace in a Hazara Shia part of the city.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-22932747