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Karachi Violence .. Updates & Discussion ..

I dnt think so. the turnout is less than 40%. majority of the people who vote are villagers belonging to villages of the leaders of these parties, who have their lives destroyed due to loans they owe to their land owners, have no idea who are they voting for, get a mini portion of their debt written off; there you go, loyalties sold to these knuckle heads.

in punjab zaat biradri is most factor sir jee not loans. there is few zimindaars syeds makhdooms or whatever one go another comes game is going on since 64 years
 
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With Leader like these , who need enemies ?
 
I dnt think so. the turnout is less than 40%. majority of the people who vote are villagers belonging to villages of the leaders of these parties, who have their lives destroyed due to loans they owe to their land owners, have no idea who are they voting for, get a mini portion of their debt written off; there you go, loyalties sold to these knuckle heads.

bhutto's vote bank came from rural areas/lower class, they proved that if appeal is strong, response will also be... even if you remember Pir of Pagaro also have lost election from his own constituency, the Hur said to him Sayeen Jaan hazir hai...vote nahi...


tab bhi burj ultay thay, ab bhi ulat jayen gay, or else we know how to get rid of them... ultimately we have SC and Military that are at our back, I wont mind out of the box, constitutional solution this time...

we the people are the ultimate power,
 
bhutto's vote bank came from rural areas/lower class, they proved that if appeal is strong, response will also be... even if you remember Pir of Pagaro also have lost election from his own constituency, the Hur said to him Sayeen Jaan hazir hai...vote nahi...


tab bhi burj ultay thay, ab bhi ulat jayen gay, or else we know how to get rid of them... ultimately we have SC and Military that are at our back, I wont mind out of the box, constitutional solution this time...



What they have done until now ?
 
What they have done until now ?

Well military has cleared Swat and Tribal areas from terrorists. Put TTP on back foot. Sacrificed a lot for this country. What SC has done except wasting time is debatable.
 
Traders are saying if the army is not called in 24 hours then they will shut down their businesses.
 
Well military has cleared Swat and Tribal areas from terrorists. Put TTP on back foot. Sacrificed a lot for this country. What SC has done except wasting time is debatable.


so Army cannot take unilateral action .. they must need the order from Govt which is next to impossible .
 
Twelve more killed in Karachi’s unabated violence



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KARACHI: Twelve more people were killed since Thursday night as death toll during last three days rose to 59 in the city, DawnNews reported.

Two people were gunned down in the areas of Gulshan-e-Iqbal and Shireen Jinnah Colony while three bodies were recovered from Lyari, Kharadar and New Karachi.

The city plunged into the fresh wave of violence on Wednesday when a former lawmaker of the Pakistan People’s Party was shot dead.

Earlier on Thursday, at least 21 bullet-riddled and tortured bodies stuffed in gunny bags were found in different parts of the city as more than 30 people were killed in the city on the second day of a renewed wave of violence that police saw blended with an ‘ethnic colour’, taking the two-day death toll to nearly 50, a report published in Dawn said.

Thursday’s casualties that emerged as the largest single-day toll in current spree of violence left people in a state of constant fear.

Despite measures promised both by the federal and provincial administrations, no credible action from the law enforcers was witnessed.

The trend of brutal incidents that emanated from the city’s south district on Wednesday evening stretched to the west on Thursday and police said victims were kidnapped and tortured before being shot dead. Their bodies were stuffed in gunny bags and dumped at various places.

Most of the victims, police said, were common wage-earners who had been kidnapped mostly on Wednesday evening while returning home from their workplaces. In some cases they were dragged off public transport.

With the latest round of abductions, torture and brutal killings, Lyari and other parts of old Karachi and its adjoining neighbourhoods have remained in grip of extreme ethnic tension.

Accusations and counter accusations by various politicalgroups over the past 24 hours clearly suggest that the latest round of killings in old Karachi has very little to do with the ongoing war between Lyari’s criminal gangs.

Eyewitnesses and political observers say ethnic and political rivalries were the dominant factors behind most of the killings over the past three days.

They point out that while most of those abducted and gunned down earlier in the week were pre-dominantly Lyari’s local Baloch, including footballers and a former MNA, many of those forcibly taken away and shot dead in overnight violence belonged to the Urdu- speaking community.

Allegations levelled by the PPP-backed Lyari Amn Committee and Muttahida Qaumi Movement against each other confirm that divisions during the current wave of violence in old parts of Karachi are along ethnic lines.

Alleged involvement of some Lyari gangsters in the Haqiqi-led attack on an MQM stronghold in Landhi-Malir area last month, a protest campaign by many traders of Kharadar and adjoining areas against so-called ‘protection money’, and retaliatory action by the extortionist mafia and other affected groups were also said to be factors behind the latest phase of targeted killings.

Saud Mirza, Additional IG of Sindh police, said the violence was triggered by a clash between two criminal gangs in Lyari on Wednesday evening.

“But somehow over the hours it turned into an ethnically motivated affair. We have found that criminal gangs are targeting Urdu-speaking and Baloch common men in their respective areas,” he said.

He said the most affected areas were those adjacent to Lyari and pockets in trans-Lyari, including Kharadar, Meethadar, Pak Colony, Rizvia and Baldia Town, and the law enforcers were all set to launch an operation there to arrest the criminals.

The overnight scattered grenade attacks and intense firing sowed fear in the south district where residents of old city areas and Baldia Town spent a sleepless night.

In a rare admission of failure, a depressed Home Minister Manzoor Hussain Wasan said the government and law-enforcement agencies had not been able to quell violence.

“Today is not a good day for the Sindh government, police and other law-enforcement agencies,” he said while briefing the media on decisions taken at a meeting convened by the chief minister on the law and order situation.

Accompanied by provincial police chief Wajid Ali Durrani, he said: “We are quite aware of the hands behind this killing spree and disturbance and the government is well aware of its responsibility to protect the life and property of people.”

He said the fresh bout of killings could be an attempt to sabotage the ongoing reconciliation talks between the Pakistan People’s Party and the MQM in Islamabad.


But the MQM alleged that “certain leaders in the government” wanted to derail the reconciliatory process between the two parties.

“President Asif Ali Zardari wants to promote the process of reconciliation in Pakistan and he wants better relations between the PPP and the MQM. The president must think what benefit the public will get from the reconciliatory process if the killing of innocent citizens continues,” MQM leader Raza Haroon said at a press conference.
 
not true, you created this problem at your own, this is your own home grown problem, not a problem of Pakistan...you will alone burn in this hell...

By you who are you referring to? Karachites? Pakistanis? who?
 
Traders are saying if the army is not called in 24 hours then they will shut down their businesses.

Army require order from Sindh government... also governor can implement governor raj with approval of the president... and then i think he can call army...
 
Cycle of violence: Mr Rehman Malik, meet Karachi’s wives and girlfriends

KARACHI:

In one of his usual ill-timed platitudes last month, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said 70% of target killings in Karachi were courtesy wives and girlfriends looking to get rid of their partners and vice versa.

But for the wives, girlfriends and fiancées of the victims of target killings, the blame – all 100% – lies with the government and criminals linked to political parties locked in a hellish cycle of revenge.

Maria is one such wife. Her husband Irfan Gulzar told her he was stepping out close by and would be back shortly.

His mangled remains came back to her in a body bag on Thursday evening. A relative who went to the morgue said he counted 25 bodies in a similar state.

“He was a good husband,” she says in a faint voice, labouring over each word. Her mother-in-law makes her sip a glass of cold water. The two women – a grieving widow and mother – have no idea where their life goes from here. Remarrying is for now a distant, unthinkable concept for Maria. This Eid would have been the couple’s two-year anniversary.

Another victim, Azhar, 26, had never ventured into Lyari’s Jatpat Market before. He made a living each day by embroidering Baloch designs on fabric. As business had been slowed down in four days of violence, he decided to try the market to look for work.

His fiancée cries. His mother sits, wailing, clutching her daughters. Her son, Khizr, holds her head in his hands, imploring her to stop.

A few paces away, her son’s body – beheaded, pockmarked with bullets and scarred by torture – lies in a wooden coffin, waiting to be taken to the graveyard.

The house and courtyard are crowded with women, some sobbing, others speaking in hushed tones. “His body was cut into pieces,” whispers one. Another says she had heard of girls being kidnapped from Liaquatabad, “injected with drugs” and then “photographed”.

“The boys were riled up on Thursday,” says Mohammad Usman, who used to be councillor in the area. “They wanted to retaliate but we stopped them. Killing each other is not the solution.”

Women flood into the houses in Liaquatabad to mourn, their young children in tow, who appear entirely at sea. Nine-year-old Huzaifa confidently remarks that he knows the ethnicity of the man who killed Azhar. When the gunmen came, he ran inside his house.

At Irfan’s house, Kanwal, 11, sits among the mourners. “I hear bullets at night,” she says. “It scares me, I cannot go to sleep.”

She lives near Haji Camp, explains a woman sitting nearby. “Her other siblings are so scared because hand grenades were lobbed into their neighbourhood. They have been moved to their grandmother’s house in Malir. Only Kanwal has stayed back with her mother.”

Mothers are concerned about their young children’s mental state. “My son doesn’t want to go to the mosque because he’s scared of dying. What happens if we cannot even go to God’s house?”

As mourners amassed at Azhar’s house on Thursday evening, a couple of men passed by and shot at the marquee pitched outside the building. “Our boys also got their arms out and took up positions,” says Azhar’s cousin, Suraiya. “They have to defend and protect us if these things happen. Will everyone now need to be armed?”

“What else do you expect when men have no jobs?” says a former Peoples Amn Committee member on Wednesday. “Of course they will take up arms.”

Across town, Khizr agrees. “There is a lot of anger.”

The rage among Karachi’s young men has manifested itself as target killings, which have constantly ticked on for over a year now. The guns are whipped out seconds after the news spreads of the death of a political party member or an ill-timed speech. And the outcome of the ‘revenge’ fills the morgues.

Near Liaquatabad Daakhana, a few tyres are set on fire. It is a warning sign: the real fire and anger lies ahead, glowering in the young men’s minds.

Published in The Express Tribune, August 20th, 2011.
 
An urgent military or police operation to cleanse Karachi form illegal weapons is long overdue in order to control the ever-growing law and order problem in the financial hub.

The biggest show of the power of bullets in the history of Karachi was demonstrated by MQM in the late 80s. It's MQM that introduced the politics of guns and dead bodies in Karachi.

The Pakistan Army conducted a massive operation against MQM in the early 90s when an army Major was abducted and tortured by the militant wing of MQM and the rest in history.

An organized police operation in the mid 90s cut the the militant wing of MQM into size.

The military dictator Musharraf needed MQM to consolidate his power, thereby he presented Urban Sindh to MQM on a golden platter. Most of the police officers who were involved in the operation in the 90s against MQM were killed one by one by MQM and no step was taken at the highest level to protect those police officers. The diehard disciples of Altaph Bai have their own version of story to justify the killing of those innocent police officers who just did their duty.

Other political parties have also learned that they need the latest weapons available in their arsenals if they don't want to get annihilated at the hands of the militant wing of MQM.

ab bhugto...
 
When I was living in Karachi 20 years ago, we always used to hear of violence in faraway places like lyari, malir, korangi etc.Looks like nothing much has changed...

I've lived in Karachi from 87-88 when my father was posted there for the Air War College (AWC)

And yet we used to hear there is curfew in certain parts of Karachi.

Unknown to many Pakistani, with the advent of mqm in 1984 this all started in 86 when they organized everything, before 86 there was nothing as such violence in Sindh.
 
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