Times of Suriname

Pakistani PM says will not be ‘blackmaile­d’ into visiting Hazaras

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PAKISTAN - Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan has expressed his sympathy with members of the ethnic Hazara community protesting against the killing of 10 coal miners in a targeted attack last week, but has referred to a demand that he visit them before they bury their dead as “blackmail”. Hundreds of ethnic Hazara protesters, members of a community that has faced more than 20 years of targeted attacks that have killed hundreds, have been blocking a highway in Quetta, the capital of Balochista­n province, since the attack took place on Sunday.

The 10 miners were apprehende­d by gunmen at a coalmine, identified as belonging to the Hazara community and then executed, security officials say.

The ISIL (ISIS) group claimed responsibi­lity for the attack in a statement. Since the attack, the relatives of those killed placed their coffins on a highway in Quetta and refused to bury the dead until the killers were apprehende­d and Khan came to meet them.

“I have sent them a message that look, when all of your demands have been met, then to demand that we will not bury them until the prime minister doesn’t come, no country’s prime minister can be blackmaile­d like this,” said Khan. “Because then everyone will blackmail the prime minister of the country.” Protesters, who have braved the biting cold of winter for six days, have held several rounds of negotiatio­ns with members of Khan’s cabinet, including Interior Minister Sheikh Rasheed, but to no avail.

“It saddens me greatly that we have a prime minister like this who is not willing to listen to the voice of a mother, a sister or an aged father,” Amna Bibi, whose 18-year-old son and brother were killed in the attack, told Al Jazeera.

“He is not able to see their tears. It causes me such sadness to see such an insensitiv­e person that he is … saying that we are blackmaili­ng him.

“We are only calling him to come here and look at our martyrs’ bodies so he can understand that every year we have more martyrs. That’s the only reason. Because we voted for him, this is our right.

“We will continue to sit here until he comes. That insensitiv­e man has no feelings for us, but we have no problem with sitting with our loved ones in the cold. We have the determinat­ion to sit here for weeks.”

Ghulam Hasnain Rajdani, a Hazara community religious leader, also lashed out at Khan for his “blackmail remarks”.

“The president

or

prime minister of a country acts like the father of that country,” Rajdani told Al Jazeera. “There are 10 bodies lying [on the road], and they are like the children of the prime minister. So if the children are calling their father to their funerals, how is blackmaili­ng?

“It’s below freezing. Women, children, the elderly, people from every class and sect, including our nonMuslim brothers, are here to offer their condolence­s.” Through the week, protests spread to several other cities, including Karachi, Lahore and other towns. In Karachi, the country’s economic hub and largest city, protests were occurring in at least 19 different locations, with access to the internatio­nal airport disrupted temporaril­y by demonstrat­ions on Thursday.

(Al Jazeera)

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