Mourners of slain miners continue sit-in with coffins in Quetta as protests enter sixth day

Mourners of slain miners continue sit-in with coffins in Quetta as protests enter sixth day
People chant slogans as they sit with coffins of their relatives, coal miners from Shi'ite Hazara minority, who were killed in an attack in Mach area of Bolan district, as they protest demanding justice in Quetta, Pakistan January 7, 2021. (REUTERS)
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Updated 08 January 2021
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Mourners of slain miners continue sit-in with coffins in Quetta as protests enter sixth day

Mourners of slain miners continue sit-in with coffins in Quetta as protests enter sixth day
  • Opposition leaders Bilawal Bhutto Zardari and Maryam Nawaz met with mourners from Shia Hazara community on Thursday
  • Mourners and protest organizers say sit-in to be called off when PM Khan visits Quetta, PM’s plans not yet final

ISLAMABAD: Thousands of protesters from the Shia Hazara minority community in Balochistan continued a sit-in on Friday, saying they would not bury their relatives, killed by Daesh gunmen on Sunday, until Prime Minister Imran Khan visited the province and ensured justice. 
Gunmen abducted a group of minority Hazara Shia coal miners and killed 11 on early Sunday, Pakistani officials said. The Daesh group later claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement on its website. The militant group has repeatedly targeted Pakistan’s minority Shias in recent years. 
Families of the victims placed the dead bodies on a road connecting Quetta with Sukkar on Sunday, but later moved them to the provincial capital where they have been sitting with the coffins on a major highway since. They demand that they will call off their sit-in only whenPM Khan visits Quetta to meet protesters. 
A member of Khan’s cabinet, who declined to be named, said the PM’s plans to travel to Quetta were “not yet finalized.” 
Bilalwal Bhutto-Zardari, chairman of the Pakistan Peoples Party, and Maryam Nawaz Sharif, vice president of the Pakistan Muslim-League Nawaz, on Thursday arrived in Quetta to meet with protesters.
On Wednesday, Khan urged relatives of the slain miners to end their protest and bury their loved ones, saying he would visit the mourners for condolences “soon.” 
“I share your pain & have come to you before also to stand with you in your time of suffering,” the PM tweeted, addressing relatives of the deceased. “I will come again very soon to offer prayers and condole with all the families personally. I will never betray my people’s trust. Please bury your loved ones so their souls find peace.” 
But the Majlis-e-Wihdatul Muslimeen, a Shia political group that is heading the protests, said the sit-in would be called off only when the PM came to Quetta. 
Quetta is home to roughly 600,000 Hazara Shias, largely confined to two fortified enclaves.
On Monday, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned the killing of the 11 miners, saying seven of them were Afghan citizens. 
An official with the Levies Force, which serves as police and paramilitary in the area, told local media the gun attack took place near the remote Machh coal field, about 48 km east of the provincial capital Quetta. 
Agha Syed Muhammad Raza, a senior leader of the Majlis-e-Wihdatul Muslimeen, said the victims had been blindfolded, with their arms and legs tied up, and were killed with knives. 
“We have become tired of picking up the bodies of our people,” Syed Agha Raza, a Hazara political leader, told Reuters. 
Masooma Yaqoob Ali said her elder brother along with four other relatives was among those killed. 
“Now we have no male member [of our family] to take coffins of our brother and other relatives to the graveyard for burial,” she said, shedding tears as she spoke.