Sacrificing Our TODAY for the World's TOMORROW
FATA is "Federally Administered Tribal Area" of Pakistan; consisting of 7 Agencies and 6 F.Rs; with a 27000 Sq Km area and 4.5 m population.
MYTH: FATA is the HUB of militancy, terrorism and unrest in Afghanistan.
REALITY: FATA is the worst "VICTIM of Militancy”. Thousands of Civilians dead & injured; Hundreds of Schools destroyed; Thousands of homes raised to ground; 40% population displaced from homes.
Showing posts with label HumanRights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HumanRights. Show all posts

Sunday, June 12, 2011

We Pakistanis are getting Senseless - By Wusatullah Khan - کیا آپ یہی چاہتے ہیں؟

بی بی سی اردو ڈاٹ کام :Courtesy

کیا آپ یہی چاہتے ہیں؟

اس دن بھی جماعت پنجم کے ماسٹر لطیف صاحب پڑھاتے پڑھاتے حسبِ معمول بہت دور نکل گئے ۔ انہوں نے تاریخِ پاکستان کا مضمون ایک طرف لپیٹ کر رکھ دیا اور انسانی درندگی پر شروع ہوگئے۔ پھرماسٹر لطیف نے اپنے تھیلے سے ایک اخباری مضمون کا تراشہ نکالا۔
مضمون جنگِ ویتنام کے بارے میں تھا اور اس میں چھپی تصویر میں ایک ویتنامی پولیس افسر ایک امریکی فوجی کی موجودگی میں ایک مشکوک مقامی نوجوان کو کنپٹی کے قریب ریوالور رکھ کر گولی مار رہا تھا۔اس نوجوان نے موت سے لمحہ بھر پہلے شتر مرغ کی طرح اپنی آنکھیں بند کی ہوئی تھیں اور ہونٹ بھینچ رکھے تھے۔

Friday, June 3, 2011

'STATE without a MIND':Obituary of Baloch Professor Saba Dashtiari - By Wusatullah Khan سوری دشتیاری صاحب

بی بی سی اردو ڈاٹ کام :Courtesy

سوری دشتیاری صاحب

مر تو سب ہی جائیں گے لیکن کچھ لوگ توقع سے زیادہ زندہ رہ جاتے ہیں۔ صبا دشتیاری کی موت بھی تاخیر سے ہوئی۔
انہیں جس نے بھی مارا عجلت میں نہیں مارا۔انہیں قاتل نے سدھرنے کے لئے کافی وقت دیا لیکن صبا دشتیاری چونکہ جذباتی آدمی تھے، دماغ سے زیادہ دل سے کام لیتے تھے اس لئے انہیں یہ سامنے کی بات سمجھ میں نہ آسکی کہ وہ دی گئی مہلت سے فائدہ اٹھائیں، دائرے کے اندر رہ کر کھیلیں ۔بلوچوں کے حقوق کے لئے منہ سے آگ اگلنے کا کرتب بند کریں۔
یونیورسٹیاں یقیناً آزاد خیالی کی پرورش گاہیں ہوتی ہیں لیکن یہ ایک مغربی تصور ہے۔ یہاں ایسا نہیں ہوتا۔ یہاں آزاد خیالی اور شرک میں بال برابر فرق ہے۔ لہذا اگر یہ شوق پورا کرنا ہے تو کسی ایسی جگہ جائیے جہاں سماج اور ریاست میں ہر بات برداشت کرنے کی قوت اور صلاحیت ہو۔ ایک طے شدہ نظریاتی سرزمین میں ایسی لگژری برداشت نہیں ہو سکتی۔ یونیورسٹی میں اپنے شاگردوں کو صرف وہ نصاب پڑھانے تک خود کو محدود رکھیں جو ریاست نے متعین کردیا ہے۔

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Afghanistan: Shameful NATO airstrike kills 14 Women and Children in Helmand (Associated Press, 29 May 2011)

Courtesy: "Associated Press (AP)", 29 May 2011
Afghan official: NATO airstrike kills 14

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- A NATO airstrike targeting insurgents inadvertently hit two civilian homes in the volatile southwestern Helmand province, killing 14 women and children, an Afghan government official said Sunday.
Dawood Ahmadi, a spokesman for the provincial government, said the alliance launched the airstrike late on Saturday in retaliation for an attack earlier in the day on a U.S. Marine base in Helmand's northwest district of Nawzad. He said NATO hit two civilian houses, killing five girls, seven boys, and two women.
NATO spokesman Maj. Tim James said a joint coalition and Afghan delegation was traveling Sunday to the site to investigate. He didn't confirm the aistrike and provided no details about it or the attack on the Marines.
Civilian deaths are an ongoing source of tension between NATO and Afghan officials.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Euthanasia (Mercy Killing) & India: Supreme Court Verdict in Aruna Shanbaug case Revives Debate (IPS News, 27 May 2011)

Courtesy: "Inter Press Service (IPS)", 27 May 2011
Supreme Court Verdict Revives Euthanasia Debate
By Sujoy Dhar
MUMBAI, May 27, 2011 (IPS) - In a secluded hospital bed in this bustling Indian metropolis, a woman who has lain brain dead for 37 years after a brutal sexual assault is at the centre of a national debate on mercy killing.
India’s Supreme Court has ruled that Aruna Shanbaug should live, while at the same time supporting passive euthanasia - or the withholding of medical treatments that are keeping her alive.
The court’s decision to rule out euthanasia of any kind for Shanbaug gladdened her former colleagues - nurses at the King Edward Memorial (KEM) Hospital - who have taken care of her since the day in 1973 when she was sodomised and strangled with a dog chain by a hospital custodian whose advances she had spurned.

Capture of Serb War Criminal Ratko Mladic; Tensions live on among Bosnians, Serbs & Croats (Associated Press, 28 May 2011)

Courtesy: "Associated Press (AP)", 28 May 2011
Bosnia tensions live on despite Mladic capture

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) -- With Ratko Mladic's capture, the main perpetrators of Bosnia's war are either behind bars or dead. But the ethnic divisions they fomented live on, in a dysfunctional country tormented by the same mistrust that provoked Europe's worst bloodshed since World War II.
New violence among Bosnia's Serbs, Croats and Bosniak Muslims is unlikely, with the international community keeping a watchful eye out for trouble. But keeping the lid on simmering tensions is about all the European Union, U.S. and other powers have been able to accomplish in the 16 years since the fighting formally ended.
Bosnia today is not at war - but it's not really at peace either. The country is treading water as it waits for a life line from the EU, the U.S. and other nations.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Fawaz al-Haraki, The Martyr of Syria's crackdown (Aljazeera English)

Courtesy: "Aljazeera English", 24 May 2011
Syria's crackdown: Why did Fawaz die?
Secret police are raiding hospitals to round up people who were injured during anti-government protests.
Fawaz al-Haraki had only minutes to live.
As the shots rang out, Abu Haidar and the other protesters ran for cover, grimly familiar with what to do when the mukhabberat (secret police) attacked.
But Fawaz fell, the blood soaking his trousers where the bullet from a Syrian secret policeman had torn into his leg.
It was Friday April 22 in the industrial city of Homs, famous for being the nation's main producer of jokes and cement.

Egypt, The real face of Military Regime: Thousands of activists disappear at hands of Military (Aljazeera English)

Courtesy: "Aljazeera English", 20 May 2011
Egypt's crackdown now wears camouflage
The military has seized on post-revolution fears to disappear thousands into its opaque prisons.
The Israeli embassy in Cairo – the first of its kind and one of only two in the Arab world – sits on the top floor of an unremarkable 15-storey office building near the Nile, a short drive south and across the river from the revolutionary epicentre of Tahrir Square. From the roof, a pole protrudes and makes a right angle high above Ibn Malek Street. Fluttering from the pole is one of the most hated symbols in the Middle East: the Star of David.
Thousands of Egyptians protested below that flag on Sunday afternoon, the 63rd anniversary of Israel's independence. They wanted their post-revolution government to hear demands that Egypt break ties with Israel. Instead, they ran into a harsh post-revolution reality: The unchecked power of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.

Mohammed al-Saleh & 'The price of return': 17 Year old Martyr of Nakba Day, 15 May 2011 (Aljazeera English)

Courtesy: "Aljazeera English", 26 May 2011
The price of return
The May 15 Nakba protests took a toll on one family in particular, losing a son that made the ultimate sacrifice.
Seventeen-year-old Mohammed al-Saleh grew up in Burj al-Shemali refugee camp in south Lebanon, caring little about politics and more about football and FC Barcelona. However, when it came to Palestine, Mohamed's 16-year-old cousin, also named Mohammed, described him as saying, "He would always say that Palestinians inside [under Israeli occupation] sacrifice a lot, and we also have to sacrifice." 
His sacrifice came on May 15, Nakba Day.
On that day, hundreds of buses carrying tens of thousands of Palestinian refugees in Lebanon travelled south to the border with Israel to stage a demonstration calling for the right to return. It was that same border that 63 years ago thousands of Palestinians crossed after more than 700,000 fled their homes fearing attacks by Zionist militias. Jews in Israel celebrate May 14 each year as their state's independence, however, Palestinians commemorate May 15 as the Nakba, or "catastrophe".

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

11 Afghans killed in Protests against NATO's killing of Civilians in Raids (Associated Press, 18 May 2011)

Courtesy: "Associated Press (AP)", 18 May 2011
Afghan rally over NATO raid turns violent; 11 die

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- Hundreds of protesters, angered by an overnight NATO raid that they believed had killed four civilians, clashed on Wednesday with security forces on the streets of a northern Afghan city. Eleven people died in the fighting, government officials said.
The demonstrators fought with police and tried to assault a German military outpost in the city of Taloqan, the capital of Takhar province, the officials said, adding that some 50 were injured.
The protest was triggered by an overnight NATO raid on the outskirts of the city. The coalition said four insurgents died in the operation and that two others were detained.
Night raids targeting insurgents regularly stir up controversy in Afghanistan, where angry residents often charge the next day that international forces go after the wrong people or mistreat civilians as they search compounds. Success by NATO in reducing civilian casualties and agreements to conduct night raids alongside Afghan forces have not managed to stem the tide of accusations.

Adding to the confusion, it is often difficult to know who is a militant in insurgent-heavy areas, where entire villages are often allied with the Taliban or other groups.
On Wednesday, hundreds of people gathered on the road from Gawmal to Taloqan and carried the four bodies - two men and two women - on platforms as they marched into the city. They shouted insults at Afghan President Hamid Karzai and the United States as they pumped their fists in the air.
"Death to Karzai! Death to America!" they yelled. Officials estimated there were about 1,500 demonstrators.
The crowd started looting shops and throwing stones at a small German base in the city. Police were out throughout the city trying to calm the crowd, Taqwa said. Gunfire could be heard in a number of neighborhoods and troops at the German outpost shot off rounds in an attempt to disperse the crowd outside their walls.
The German military said in a statement that the demonstrators threw hand grenades and Molotov cocktails into the base, injuring two German soldiers and four Afghan guards. The German soldiers, one of whom was lightly injured and one somewhat more seriously, were both in stable condition, the military said.
At least 11 protesters were killed in the fighting, and 50 people were wounded - some of them police officers, said Faiz Mohammad Tawhedi, a spokesman for the Takhar government.
The raid late Tuesday killed two men and two women who were inside a home in an area known as Gawmal, provincial Gov. Abdual Jabar Taqwa said. He said that no one in his government was informed about the raid and that NATO acted unilaterally.
Provincial police chief Gen. Shah Jahan Noori said he had not been informed of the operation and said none of his officers were involved. Army officials could not be reached immediately for comment.
NATO confirmed it killed four people, two of them women, but said all were armed and tried to fire on its troops.
One of the women was armed with an assault rifle and tried to fire on the troops, NATO said. The other woman was armed with a pistol and pointed her gun at the security force as she was trying to escape the compound.
It is rare for women to be part of an insurgent fighting force in Afghanistan, but not unheard of. There have been cases in the past of women fighting with the insurgency, including as suicide bombers.
NATO said the raid was conducted by a "combined Afghan and coalition security force" and an alliance spokesman said that the governor was contacted ahead of the raid.
"It is standard practice in Takhar province to contact the Afghan provincial leadership prior to an operation. In this case, calls were placed to the provincial governor six times prior to the operation," Maj. Michael Johnson said.
"We are aware of the claims of civilian casualties, and are looking into them," Johnson added.
President Hamid Karzai sided with the Afghan officials. He issued a statement condemning the night raid as having killed four members of a family, and said it was not coordinated with Afghan forces.
"Despite repeated warnings that have been issued by President Karzai to top these uncoordinated NATO operations, it seems these types of operations still have not stopped," Karzai's office said in a statement.
He said the Afghan people should protest without turning to violence, but also said that the blame for the protest lies with NATO.
NATO said that the raid targeted a man working with the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan - an insurgent group that is powerful in the north. The man was involved in arms trafficking and building explosives, NATO said. The alliance did not say if he was killed or captured.
In the south, meanwhile, a NATO service member died Wednesday in an insurgent attack, the military coalition said. NATO did not provide further details or the service member's nationality

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Note: The viewpoint expressed in this article is solely that of the writer / news outlet. "FATA Awareness Initiative" Team may not agree with the opinion presented.
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We Hope You find the info useful. Keep visiting this blog and remember to leave your feedback / comments / suggestions / requests / corrections.
With Regards,
"FATA Awareness Initiative" Team.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Syria: Mass grave found near Protest hub Deraa, residents say (Guardian, 17 May 2011)

Courtesy: "Guardian, UK", 17 May 2011
Syrian mass grave found near Deraa, residents say
Human rights groups report 13 bodies unearthed from field in southern city at centre of protest movement
Nidaa Hassan
Thirteen bodies have been retrieved from a mass grave in Deraa, the hub of Syria's protest movement, according to residents cited by rights organisations.
People from the southern city say hundreds are unaccounted for since a crackdown on protests began on 18 March and intensified when the army moved in on 25 April to try to quash unrest against Bashar al-Assad's 11-year rule.
Radwan Ziadeh, the US-based head of the Damascus Centre for Human Rights, said so far seven bodies had been identified by residents.

Five of the dead were reportedly from the same family: Abdulrazaq Abdulaziz Abazied and his four children, Samer, Samir, Suleiman and Mohamed.
Wissam Tarif of the human rights group Insan said: "Nobody knows who is behind the grave but the fact that there were people with hands tied behind their back and we have seen an operation across the country by the army, security and shabiha makes us believe the state is behind this."
The National Organisation for Human Rights in Syria also reported a grave found on Monday. "Authorities immediately cordoned off the area to prevent residents from recovering the bodies," it said.
Several videos purporting to show the unearthing of bodies from a field close to the city have been posted.
The government said reports of a mass grave were "completely untrue", state TV reported on Tuesday.
The official Syrian news agency, Sana, said Assad met a delegation from Deraa and they discussed the "positive atmosphere there as a result of co-operation between the residents and the army".
Residents report that landlines have been restored, the curfew shortened and tanks have withdrawn to the outskirts, but the city remains under tight control.
Accounts of the mass grave could not be independently verified, although the pro-regime newspaper al-Watan acknowledged on Tuesday that five bodies had been found.
"Given that Syria's officials have demonstrated time and time again that they are incapable of launching an independent investigation, it should be the UN-mandated international inquiry that looks into these killings," Nadim Houry, the Beirut-based senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, told the Guardian.
Nick Harvey, the UK armed forces minister, said it was "highly likely" that the international criminal court would seek the arrest of Syria's president for his role in the violent crackdown on protesters in the two-month uprising.
Britain has demanded the end to the use of violence but has not called for Assad to step down.
Meanwhile, the protests and crackdown have continued as the US condemned Syria's role in the breaching of the Israeli border by protesters on Nakba Day, and the EU and US this week consider further moves, including sanctions on Assad himself.
Referring to the fatal Nakba Day protests on Sunday, the White House press secretary, Jay Carney, said: "It seems apparent to us that is an effort to distract attention from the legitimate expression of protest by the Syrian people."
Thousands of protesters marched through the town of Saqba close to Damascus on Monday night for the funeral of Ahmed Ataya who died from wounds sustained at a protest last month, while at least 15 tanks were deployed around Arida, near the border town of Tel Kelak.
Activists said at least seven civilians were killed in Tel Kelak on Sunday when troops shelled the town, and one was killed on Monday, raising the death toll since troops entered on Saturday to 12. Syrian officials say five soldiers were killed by armed gangs in the town.
Veteran dissidents who have met government officials say that officials acknowledge the protests in private.
But in public, authorities have blamed most of the violence on armed groups backed by extremists and foreign powers.
"Syria's leaders talk about a war against terrorists, but what we see on the ground is a war against ordinary Syrians," Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director of Human Rights Watch, said in a statement on Sunday.

Nidaa Hassan is a pseudonym for a journalist in Syria

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Note: The viewpoint expressed in this article is solely that of the writer / news outlet. "FATA Awareness Initiative" Team may not agree with the opinion presented.
....................

We Hope You find the info useful. Keep visiting this blog and remember to leave your feedback / comments / suggestions / requests / corrections.
With Regards,
"FATA Awareness Initiative" Team.