http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/02/19/pakistan-shiites-call-off-protest-set-to-bury-dead/

Pakistan Shiites call off protest, set to bury dead 


QUETTA: Thousands of Pakistani Shiite Muslims called off nationwide protests 
yesterday and agreed to bury the dead from a bomb attack that killed 89 people, 
after the government promised to arrest those responsible. Saturday’s attack 
was the second bomb targeting the Shiite Hazara minority in five weeks in 
Quetta and saw protesters pour onto the streets across the country, shutting 
down parts of Karachi, Lahore and Islamabad. Shiites, who make up around 20 
percent of the mostly Sunni Muslim population of 180 million, are facing record 
numbers of attacks, raising serious questions about security as nuclear-armed 
Pakistan prepares to hold elections by mid-May.

Outlawed militant group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LJ) has claimed responsibility for 
the Quetta attacks and Shiites were furious that authorities have done nothing 
to prosecute those responsible. Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf sent cabinet 
ministers to the southwestern city to negotiate with the protesters and 
announced an operation to arrest those responsible for the attack. Officials 
said security forces had killed four men and detained more than 170 alleged 
suspects, including the purported mastermind of Saturday’s bombing.

Pakistani security forces frequently detain people en masse after major 
bombings but few if any are ever charged. In 2011 a court released the head of 
LJ Malik Ishaq on bail, even though he has been implicated in dozens of 
murders. But a spokesman for the protesters announced alongside Information 
Minister Qamar Zaman Kaira after talks that the protest was over. “The sit-in 
protest all over Pakistan is now finished and people should disperse 
peacefully,” said Allama Amin Shahidi, from the Shiite Wahdatul Muslemeen party.

“The government has assured us that they will fulfil all our demands. The 
governor and the government told us that a targeted operation has begun, which 
will continue until all the culprits are eliminated.” The dead are now expected 
to be buried early today. Kaira promised the operation would “arrest all the 
culprits and eliminate them” and said a committee would be set up to oversee 
the protesters’ demands for compensation, protection and jobs for families of 
the victims.

Since late Sunday, scores of coffins lay in neat rows, most decorated with 
pictures of the victims, in the the courtyard of a Shiite mosque near the 
protest site. Relatives sat with the coffins reciting verses for the dead from 
the Koran. The youngest victim was a five-year-old boy who died along with his 
mother when the bomb, containing nearly a tonne of explosives, demolished a 
shopping centre.

Last month, Shiites called off a similar protest when Islamabad sacked the 
provincial government and imposed governor’s rule after suicide bombers killed 
92 people at a Hazara snooker hall in Quetta on January 10. Quetta is a small 
town where the military and intelligence agencies have a heavy presence. Rights 
groups have questioned whether authorities are complicit with extremists or 
just incompetent.

Amnesty International repeated calls for Pakistan to do more to protect 
Hazaras, describing the failure to bring those responsible to justice as 
“shocking”. Attacks targeting Shiites in Pakistan have claimed almost 200 lives 
already this year. Human Rights Watch said more than 400 were killed in 2012, 
the deadliest on record for Shiites. Hazaras have suffered disproportionately 
in Baluchistan, where authorities are also battling to suppress a separatist 
insurgency. – AFP


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