More and more fissures are appearing everywhere, cutting through our society and dividing it up into smaller and smaller groups. We are split on the basis of ethnicity, of social status, of gender, of religion and of sect. Quetta over the last few months, appears to have emerged as the focal point of the attacks on Shias — often members of the minority Hazara community. The latest act of violence directed against them shows they are not to be allowed even to observe one of the most holy days on the Islamic calendar without being stalked relentlessly by death.
Why, we must ask, are we so helpless against the forces that carry out such attacks? Why have the culprits not been apprehended despite the presence of a vast security and intelligence network? Even after the hundreds of sectarian deaths that have taken place over the last decade there is a lack of clarity as to precisely who is responsible. We must also ask why there has not been a louder outcry: from civil society groups, from the media, from political parties and from clerics. After all, the persons carrying out such attacks cannot claim to be Muslims, to be members of a religion that preaches peace and tolerance. They must then be openly condemned as the murderers they are, to restore to our nation the harmony it so badly needs.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 3rd, 2011.
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