The plight of Hazara people by Asef Ali Mohammad
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Ariel shot of Quetta town

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Hazara boys tend to play cricket team only within their area.

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Naseer Ullah escaped major injuries but is now unable to walk after being attacked by a suicide bomber in a rally in Quetta after Jumma prayers.

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Family of Mohammad Bukhsh who was killed along with 3 other Hazara men whilst purchasing vegetables for his vendor’s cart in a non-Hazara area.

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Jaleel Ullah survived after his coach that was traveling to Iran came under heavy shooting, in which most of his other fellow travellers were killed.

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Family of Dr. Abid Iqbal Zaidi who was assassinated by terrorists while driving to work.

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A UN funded primary school for Afghan Hazara kids in Quetta.

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Rabiya, a young Afghan refugee at the school.

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Jan Ali escaped major injuries after his vehicle came under heavy firing by unknown men. He is the beard winner of his family and is unable to work now.

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Burying three-time Olympic boxer Abrar Hussain who died after being shot in the head by unknown gunmen while driving home from his office

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The ‘ethnic cleansing’ of Hazara people in the city of Quetta, Pakistan

The minority Hazara tribe live with the majority Pashtons and Balochs in Quetta, the capital of mainly Balouchi-tribe in Balochistan province in western Pakistan. Historically they migrated to this town during the late last century to escape the Soviet war and seek a better life outside war-torn Afghanistan. Geographically Quetta is situated near Afghanistan and Iran's borders and is about 446 miles away from Gwardar (which is on the Arabian sea coast connecting the country to the Middle East and South and Central Asia via sea). The city is an important trade and communications centre for the country as well as for its neighbours. It hosts military bases for the Pakistani Armed Forces and is about 200 miles southwest of the previously US-held Shamsi airfield.

Over the past few years hundreds of individuals from the community in Quetta have fallen victim to the terrorist and sectarian violence. They have been facing severe discrimination perpetrated by unknown militants due to their ethnic background and religious affiliations. As most of its people are Shia Muslims, the tribe have been targeted for some time now with hundreds of men women and children being killed during Jumma prayers, religious rallies as well as many highly skilled professionals, gold medallists, social activists and political leaders have been target-killed or assassinated in the last year alone.

Whilst Pakistan as a country has been going through some tough times, the Hazara community is striving to ensure that their victims of sectarian violence are not forgotten by commemorating the killings of 600 victims killed and more than 1100 injured since 2002. The bulk of killings took place in the past few years with more than 90 people being killed since July 2011 alone. On September 2011, 29 men were killed and many others gravely injured in a premeditated attack whilst travelling to Iran in a bus that was intercepted near Mastung by armed militants. There have been no convictions for these killings. 

Asef Ali Mohammad, email, pygham@hotmail.com, Mobile, +44 (0)79 1746 6935

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Asef Ali Mohammad (born Afghanistan, 1985) was educated in Pakistan before moving to the UK in 2002 and currently undertaking a photography degree at Middlesex University, London.

 

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Name : Asef Ali Mohammad

Email : pygham@hotmail.com. info@asef.co.uk

Address: North Finchley, London.

Website: www.asef.co.uk

Mobile : +4479 1746 6935.                            

Asef's works Stories from Kabul has been published in Newsweek, online on foto8 and the BBC and was picked up by Impressions Gallery who exhibited the work in a group exhibition 'Bringing the War home'. Another project Kabuli Artists won Sony World Photograpgy Awards Studnet Focus 2012, Published in Shoot mag, Belgium and been exhibited at Somerset House, the Underground Gallery, and the Truman Brewery. His recent work The plight of the Hazara people in Pakistan has been published in the New Internationalist mag, The Sundaytimes Spectrum online, broadcasted on Al Jazeera The Stream, The Guardian Blog, The Jang broadsheet in Paskistan, Barnet and Finchley Times, Local Press and exhibited at the Underground Gallery.     

 

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