Yahoo - AFP, Maaz Khan, 18 February 2013
Thousands
of women refused to bury victims of a bloody bombing and a strike shut down
Pakistan's biggest city Karachi as protesters across the country demanded
protection for Shiite Muslims.
Up to
4,000 women began their sit-in in Quetta Sunday evening, a day after a bomb in
the city killed 81 members of the minority community including nine women and
two girls aged seven and nine.
The
women blocked a road and refused to bury the dead until authorities take action
against the extremists behind the attack, which wounded 178 people.
The
bomb, containing nearly a tonne of explosives hidden in a water tanker, tore
through a crowded market in Hazara Town, a Shiite-dominated area on the edge of
the city on Saturday evening.
It was
the second deadly blast in the city in little over a month.
The
sit-in continued Monday at Hazara Town and near a local station, said Wazir
Khan Nasir, police chief of Quetta which is the capital of the southwestern
province of Baluchistan.
"We
are going to resume negotiations with the Shiite community leaders this morning
to convince them to bury the dead," Nasir told AFP.
However
a local Shiite party leader, Qayyum Changezi, said the protesters "will
not bury the dead until a targeted operation is launched".
UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon strongly condemned the bomb blast and called on
authorities to act quickly against those responsible.
Sit-in
demonstrations were held in several cities and towns across the country
demanding an end to the killing of Shiites.
Public
transport drivers and traders stopped work in Karachi Monday after a Shiite
party called a protest strike, residents said.
Schools
were closed, traffic was off the roads and attendance in offices was thin in
the city. Several political and religious parties have backed the strike call.
"We
will continue our peaceful struggle for protection of the Shiite
community," said a Shiite party leader, Hasan Zafar Naqvi.
Baluchistan
has increasingly become a flashpoint for surging sectarian bloodshed between
Pakistan's majority Sunni Muslims and Shiites, who account for around a fifth
of the country's 180 million people.
Saturday's
attack takes the death toll in sectarian attacks in Pakistan this year to
almost 200 compared with more than 400 in the whole of 2012 -- a year which
Human Rights Watch described as the deadliest on record for Shiites.
A double
suicide bombing on a snooker club in Quetta on January 10 killed at least 92
people, the deadliest-ever single attack on the community in Pakistan.
No one
has been arrested for that attack and Daud Agha, chairman of the Shia
Conference, told AFP anger was rising in the community.
Although
it is customary for Muslims to bury the dead swiftly, protesters after the
snooker club bombing refused to do so, prompting Islamabad to sack the
provincial government.
The
banned militant group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) claimed responsibility for
Saturday's attack -- as it did for the snooker hall bombing and a February 1
attack on a Shiite mosque in northwest Pakistan that killed 24.
There is
anger and frustration at the apparent inability or unwillingness of the
authorities to tackle the LeJ. Activists say the failure of the judiciary to
prosecute sectarian killers allows them to operate with impunity.
Baluchistan
governor Zulfiqar Magsi pointed the finger at the security forces over the
latest atrocity.
"Repeated
occurrence of such attacks is a failure of our intelligence agencies," he
told reporters late Saturday.
"Our
security institutions, police, FC (paramilitary Frontier Corps) and others are
either scared or cannot take action against them."
But Baluchistan
home secretary Akbar Hussain Durrani said authorities were already taking
action. "Law enforcement agencies have arrested so many suspects and
seized huge cache of arms," Durrani said.
Pakistan
is due to hold a general election in coming months but there are fears that
rising sectarian and Islamist violence could force the postponement of polls.

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