By
Aasim Sajjad Akhtar
08 Jan 2021
BALOCHISTAN
bleeds again. Yet another episode of gruesome brutality against Hazaras — coal
miners no less — has brought yet another protest movement into existence.
Yesterday it was the death of a Baloch daughter of the soil on foreign shores,
tomorrow it will be a Pashtun man falling prey to the Taliban or their makers.
Khurram
Husain reminded us yesterday that the Hazaras have been brutalised many times
before, with the current prime minister mimicking the elected leaders he called
out in 2013 for failing to show respect to the dead and those who mourn them by
making a trip to Quetta.
There was
of course another Hazara sit-in in 2018 which was only called off when the army
chief went personally to the protestors and assured them that responsible
officials would be punished, their killers identified, and their future
security guaranteed.
Truth be
told, even if PM Imran Khan finally relents and meets the protestors, he does
not call the shots. The establishment and its ideologues have already set the
tone in the aftermath of the Mach attack with the standard sloganeering about
the ‘enemy’ fomenting ‘terrorism’ on our shores, and the fact that Pakistan’s
‘sovereignty’ will never be compromised.
Who cares
that these slogans are like rubbing salt in the Hazaras’ and Balochistan’s
other ethnic nations’ wounds, most of which have already bled dry? When the
‘sovereign’ state does not ask for sacrifice in blood, it takes copper from
Saindak, gold from Reko Diq, Gwadar’s coastline, gas from Sui, coal and
innumerable more minerals, not to mention virgin lands for real estate
bonanzas.
Baloch
resistance to all of this has always rendered them ‘suspicious’, the Pashtuns a
little higher up the official loyalty ladder. The mood of those on the streets
of Quetta this time suggests a deepening consciousness amongst Hazaras too that
they are but citizens in name.
The
ill-fated miners were undoubtedly targeted on the basis of their Shia faith and
butchered to death under the pretext of being children of a lesser God. But the
placard-bearing protestors know that their suffering has in the past been used
to give mandate to indiscriminate military force. There is a growing sense that
the Hazaras now perceive themselves to be in the same boat as the ‘Sunni’
Baloch and Pakhtun peoples that they might otherwise be goaded into blaming.
What about
the ‘conspirators’ operating from Afghanistan and India presumably responsible
for these attacks? It is not rocket science that there are Muslims aplenty in
both of those countries; Hazaras have in fact been regularly butchered in
Afghanistan by the very same Taliban that our state champions as ‘allies’.
What our
powers that be refer to as ‘strategic interests’ has little to do with what
might genuinely be called the public interest, and especially those segments of
the Pakistani public that have been left behind economically, or deliberately
suppressed.
Hazaras are
pawns in a bloody game that instrumentalises brutalised Baloch and Pashtun
populations too. Step outside Balochistan and sectarianism is fanned time and
again in Gilgit-Baltistan too, especially when the Shia, Sunni and Ismaili
masses unite to demand that they stop being treated as colonial subjects. Don’t
forget Kurram agency where two decades of the so-called ‘war on terror’ hasn’t
generated peace for the majority Shia or minority Sunni innocents alike.
Even where
the machinations of the establishment are not as prominent, children of a
lesser God can be found. In the Punjabi heartland, both Christians and low
caste-Muslims, begging children on the streets, daily wage workers and katchi
abadi dwellers are all considered scarcely human.
Across what
is drilled into our head as ‘enemy lines’ in Afghanistan and India, one finds
innumerable killing fields. In the former, almost daily bomb blasts can take
the lives of Tajiks and Uzbeks (many of them Shia) as well as Pashtuns (mostly
Sunni).
Meanwhile,
in Modi’s India, a special place in hell is reserved for Muslims, but Dalits,
tribals, ethnic nations like the Assamese and Nagas, not to mention hundreds of
millions of working people across religious, ethnic and caste lines, are
certainly also children of a lesser God.
But forget
other countries and rulers. Let’s come back to the land of the pure. The
current PM can certainly demonstrate some urgency by going to Quetta, just like
opposition leaders have been forced to do after considerable coaxing.
But the
very fact that the ruling party and the PDM have been slow to react suggests
that they have no answer to the question: who are the ‘Namaloom Afraad’
(unnamed persons) that continue to wreak havoc against the Hazaras, their
ethnic brethren in Balochistan, and so many others across this long-suffering
land?
There
remains no will to make these brutalised subjects into equal citizens. The plan
is to keep them in their place, divided and ruled.
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Aasim
Sajjad Akhtar teaches at Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad.
Original
Headline: Of a lesser God
Source: The Dawn, Pakistan