Karachi Bleeds Again: Worse To Come?

Posted on November 30, 2008
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Disasters, Law & Justice, Society
86 Comments
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Adil Najam

Karachi used to be called “the city that never sleeps.” It may as well now be called “the city that forever bleeds.”

Karachi is bleeding again. More than a dozen dead. 80 injured. The Sindh Home Minister says “shoot to kill.” And everyone expects more blood to spill on the streets of Karachi. Fear rules the thoroughfares of Karachi.

Here are some snapshots of what has been happening:

The News: Confusion and chaos reigned supreme in many parts of the city due to widespread rumours of violence in the city on Saturday evening. Shops and markets in Saddar, Zainab Market, Zebunnisa Street and Burns Road were closed. Besides, petrol pumps on Sharea Faisal and Saddar areas were also shutdown. Vendors and pushcarts selling eatables were also not seen near major streets of the area. Police mobile vans were seen patrolling the affected areas and personnel taking positions to thwart any law and order situation.

Daily Times: The riots started from Banaras, early on Saturday, when a driver and conductor of a local route were thrashed by a mob in Mosa Colony. As a result the aggravated locals started firing and resorted to violence. The riots spread like bush fire, engulfing surrounding areas where groups of angry protesters pelted stones and fired at cars, setting fire to many vehicles. Two rickshaws and motorcycles were burned at Pak Colony, two buses and two motorcycles in Ittehad Town, two tankers at Nagan Chowrangi and one water tanker in Qasba Morr.

The News: Naseeb, aged 22, said that he was travelling in a rickshaw when he was intercepted by four armed men riding motorcycles near Abdullah College. When Naseeb told the armed men that he was going home to Qasba Colony, one of the armed men took out his pistol and fired at him. After injuring him, the armed men fled from the scene. Safdar Khan, a 30-year-old minibus driver, said that armed men intercepted his vehicle near Qasba Mor No-1 and ordered all the passengers to get down. Afterwards, when Safdar was still in the bus, the armed men opened fire at him and set the vehicle ablaze. Muneer, a 23-year-old labourer, was going home towards Peerabad when unidentified gunmen opened fire at him and fled. Two other persons Inam Dar, aged 25, and Rose Zameer, aged 26, also sustained bullet injuries in Peerabad area and were brought to the JPMC.

The Nation: At 8:30pm on Saturday night, traffic was barely reported on the City’s main arteries including MA Jinnah road, Karachi University Road, Shahrah-e-Pakistan, Sir Shah Suleman Road, Shershah Soori Road, Shah Faisal Road, and other important roads. The public transport including buses, minibuses, rickshaws and taxies were disappeared from all the main thoroughfares when the violence news spread in different parts of the City. The transporters took off their vehicles due to fear of burning, while private commuters were also avoiding to come on the streets due to the rumours and fear… People were sending mobile messages to their relatives and friends about the effected areas as well as inquiring about the situation of settled other areas.

The News: A rickshaw driver, Nasir Mehmood, told The News that, early in the morning, he was strictly advised not to visit places like Banaras or Sohrab Goth at any cost and told that, if he ventured there, he would be targeted due to his ethnicity by the residents of those areas. “At Korangi Road, another fellow rickshaw driver refused to go to Orangi although he was offered almost double the normal fare; he still felt insecure travelling there,” said Mehmood. A resident of Manzoor Colony, Inaam-ul-Haq, told The News that he was scheduled to visit the Cattle Market situated on the Super Highway on Saturday to buy a sacrificial animal. “Due to the circulation of terrifying news, I decided to defer my plans to go there,” he said.

Dawn: According to a private television channel, Pirabad police said two unknown gunmen opened fire in the Bukhari Colony area of Orangi Town at about 2:30 p.m., killing two men and fleeing swiftly. Later, three bodies were brought to Orangi Town’s Qatar Hospital while injured were being treated in different hospitals around the city. One person was also killed during firing in the De Silva town area. Airports nationwide were put on red alert and the airports’ special passes were cancelled for security purposes, television reports said. The incidents of violence struck various parts of the city, including Banaras, Orangi Town, Quaidabad, North Karachi and Nazimabad.

Everyone seems to know the script of the drama that is about to unfold, yet again, on the streets of Karachi. Except that the deaths will be real, not make-believe. Those who will be doing the killing have been arming up. Those who will be doing the instigation have already upped their rhetoric of hate, division and violence. Those who will be doing the dying, remain on knife’s edge, hoping that they will not be called upon to be sacrificed in the rituals of ethnic murder, so close to the Eid of sacrifice. The rest sit stunned in inaction as the politics of mayhem readies to raise its ugly head yet again. We see Pakistani kill Pakistani in the name of Pakistan. We sit afraid. Very afraid.

When will this murder stop? Why must violence be the only resort? How much blood can the streets of Karachi soak? When will we learn that violence is not teh solution to our problems. It is the problem!

This is not my first post on Karachi that I am compelled to end with the prayer: “Khuda Khair Karray!” Indeed, I have had to use that refrain too many times for violence all over the country. Once again, I can think of nothing else to say. Except, maybe, that the “Khair” will first have to come from our own hearts and from our own actions.

86 responses to “Karachi Bleeds Again: Worse To Come?”

  1. Adil Baig says:

    For Shahzad and others who are equating this with the Mumbai tragedy (which in turns draws comparisions with 9/11 and the spirit to rebuild) —— these problems in Karachi have been happening non – stop since 1986 ( not sure what the average age of the posters here are and if they were around at that time and remember the Bushra Zaidi bus incident tood place which was the first time buses were set on fire and roads cordoned off in Karachi) , we are talking about a period of 22 years, —- 22 years in which what is happening today is a an exact reflection of what has happened previously.

    Roads cordoned off, men with guns roaming the streets, fires burning, cops refusing to engage, schools/colleges closed, people hiding in their houses, shops closed……….how many times will this happen before we simply give up ? As compared to Mumbai or 9/11, Karachi has had more resilence that any other city and has risen out of the ashes again and again………..but at the end the qs has to be – how long will this continue ?

    And the ans well, quite simply is that it will continue as long as man remains greedy and seriously is that going to end ??? ………are our local political parties seriously going to care about the common man who dies by the bullet and stop caring about the coffers they are filling ?

    Or are we – the people who have over the years left the country and settled abroad going to give this up and go back to Karachi and settle down there ?

    Who here is ready to go back and settle in Karachi and deal with all this ? I am honest to admit that when I read what happens in Karachi, there is a sense of relief that I am not there, I have been through it all, been robbed, been fired at and so on. So my advice to all the young people there now, leave……….simply up and leave.

    If it couldnt be resolved in 22 years, why should we think it will be resolved in the future. Karachi is not the same as Mumbai or NY , these cities do not have a history of 22 years of riots, what percentage of our independent years is that by the way ?

  2. G.A.F says:

    It has been another night of fear. All night calls from relatives suggest that fighting and killings have continued. But the media is totally silent about this. That makes it even more scary.

  3. Saim Baig says:

    I am not a supporter of any political party just saw it on all the news channels.

  4. Karachi walla says:

    There is no foreign hand involved. That is propaganda specially from MQM. And even if there is, then there have to be enough local people who are doing the killing for them. The hands the are killing are Pakistani. The only foreign hand here is that of Altaf Hussain!

  5. Saim Baig says:

    According to the latest intelligence report a foreign hand is involved in it.

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