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There was a division between the Tanzeem Nasle Nau Hazara, a party based in Quetta comprising Hazara nationalists and secular intellectuals, and the Islamist parties in Hazarajat. [104] By 1979, the Hazara Islamist groups had already liberated Hazarajat from the central Soviet-backed Afghan government and subsequently took full control of the ...
Eight Hazara men were killed on their way to work when armed assailants opened fire on a taxi carrying them on Brewery road. [50] April 21: Two brothers were shot dead on Brewery road near SBKW University adjacent to Hazara Town, Quetta. The paramilitary Frontier Corps later arrested three suspects with the help of locals. [51] [52] May 15:
Dozens of women from the Hazara community of Afghanistan protested after a suicide bombing in September 2022, occurred in an educational center that killed more than 52 young girls. Today (2021–present), the Hazaras suffer from widespread ethnic discrimination, [11] [12] [13] religious persecution, [14] [15] and organized attacks by terrorist ...
Hazara Town (Urdu: ہزارہ ٹاؤن, Hazaragi: آزره ټاون, Dari: شهرک هزاره) is a lower- to middle-income area on the western outskirts of Quetta, Pakistan, of which an almost all the residents are ethnic Hazaras, with a small population of Pashtuns and Baloch.
There is a famous story of 40 Hazara girls in Uruzgan committing suicide to escape sex slavery during the persecution. [24] 9,000 Hazara women were enslaved in Kabul alone. [4] 30 mule loads; [25] or roughly over 400 decapitated Hazara heads [N 2] were allegedly sent to Kabul. The Sultan Ahmad Hazara tribe of Uruzgan was in particular severely ...
1971 Registration of Tanzeem Nasle Nau Hazara under the societies Act XXI of 1860. 1985 Establishment of formal school by the name of Tameer Nasle Nau High School. 1990 English language center for girls and boys. 1997 Tanzeem Welfare Society registered under voluntary social welfare agencies ordinance 1961(XLVI of 1961).
Jalila Haider (Urdu/Persian: جلیله حیدر) is a Pakistani human rights attorney and political activist from Quetta in Balochistan, Pakistan. [3] She is known to be the first woman lawyer from Quetta's Hazara minority, and an advocate for the rights of her persecuted community.
The 2019 Quetta bombing was a suicide bomb attack on an open marketplace in Quetta, Pakistan on 12 April, killing 21 people. [5] [6] The bombing took place near an area where many minority Shiite Muslims live. At least ten Hazara, including nine Shiites, [7] were among the dead. Two paramilitary soldiers were also killed in the bombing.